Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, January 10, 1924, Page 2

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wit 458 ele eee 8st Bw Baoan Se So EE: 28+ te Bis = aaaer 79 ch BH OPH 3 1 } ‘ st I i 1 é 3 4 1 2 PAGE TWO REAL ESTATEAS| SHAW’S SAINT JOAN | By ALICE ROHE NEW YORK—(United Press). All the spirits connected with her Then comes a messenger from Rome WILL 1] | g F {| , i (Written for the United Press- a return and all offer obeisance. lwhen a George Bernard Shaw! to announce that the maid has been BETTER LIVING ‘arama is persented for the first time on any stage and in any country it is naturally an event of unusual in- terest. But when this drama is | known to be a Shavian satire with | Joan of Art as the inspiration, in- terest mounts toward the sensa- National Conference Set on ,,Zh2_,is what, the Theater For Atlanta this Month. Press). be a the na tiona ciation of Real Boards, which opens a three-day se! sion here Jan. 17. or subject Representatives of 450 real estate and boards of the United States Canada will attend the meeting to discuss clarification of real estate values; rental conditions, real estate utilization, city bufiding and rebutld- ing, and real estate and genera! taxa- tion: The sesston will be the princtpa’ gathering of real country to be bh formulation of poll L. F. Eppich of tion as recommended by the direct. ors. ig @ comprehensive body estate data and principles, develop ing real estate education and ad. vancing real estate through state and national legisla. tion. Directors and officers of the as-|an epilogue. suciation, forming the advisory board will hold sessions Jan. 16 and Jan 20, preceding the following ses. sions of the national committee. The subject of taxation will be pre- sented to the meeting by Charles T. Moffett of Minneapolis, chairman of the taxation committee, which has made an extensive study of the ques- tion. He is expected to recommend support of the Mellon tax plan in congress. A series of advertisements for use in newspapers has been worked out by a committee headed by Ogden A Confer of Minneapolis and will be submitted Frank Ryan of Los Angeles, F. W. Chaille of Indianapolis, L. L. Oceland of Madison, Wis.; Batholomew 0’. Toole of Chicago; Willlam EB. Shan- non of Washington, D. C; H. R Brigham of Boston, B, R. Hastings of Omaha and J. L. Weaver of Wash- ington are others who will offer re- Ports. erage ee ee This program includes gather- of real JGUSTA. Ga., Jan. 10.—(United 2nd sainted four hundred years ean Sets ite ing conditions will later, was a foregone conclusion. But considered by 28 to just how he would develop his 1 ce ittee of the ‘a prebecem, Estate hypocrisy and bigotry was the sus- ver, president! There is the basis of a- great of the nssociation, wl presant to the meeting the program for the assocta-|jt is at times development| Theater Guild has given the play fs Yi versal appeal. tate men of the/tire and s your for the/and autocracy cannot fail to get a “Saint Joan.” That Bernard Shaw would find ample scope for satirical comment in the subject of the Maid who was |condemned by the church burned by jthe secular powers, then canonized favorite pastime thtowing light on ining interest. In the Chronicle play as {t fs cal!- ed, there are moments of great beauty, of moving pathos, of deep emotion. One's soul weeps at the trial of this helpless girl of great faith—caught in the machinery ot the church in heresy baiting with her unwavering belief in God and {her God—sent voices, The central figure is one of unt- Shaw's scathing sa- bitter irony against bigotry |response from theatre audiences, And yet, interesting as the play so discursive as verge on boredom. With generous pruning of dialogue and long speech- es “Saint Joan” would be a shavian creation of power. The scenic production which the of great beauty and effectiveness. The “chronicle” {s in four acts and In the last Shaw has opportunity for a characteristic gibe. a a Se Mabe SEWER CONTRACTOR 15 ° ~~ DEGLARED IN DEFAULT XE, Wyo., Jan. 10.—The y council declared a default by C. R. Inman on his con. tract to build a storm and sanitary | A: sewer system here, and notified Inman, hi signee, TL. L. Gantz of Casper, nman’s bondsman, the National Surety company, to that effect. The city proposes to hold Inman and his surety responsible for the cost of completing the un- finished work. The default was de- clared when Gantz, who took over the work several months ago, for- mally notified the city that he would not complete it. The sewer job, originally esti- mated to consume about a year, has LARAMIE BUSINESS BUILDINGS DAMAGED LAST NIGHT BY FIRE LARAMIE, Wyo., Jan. 10.—Two wooden two-story buildings on third street, one belonging to the First National Bank and the other to C. B. Root, were badly damaged by fire last night. Fred Frick, occupying the second story of the Root Build- ing, escaped in his night clothes, The buildings are separated by a few feet of open lot from the Root opera house, which was originally the first school house in Laramie. One of the burned buildings was erected on Second street in 1868 and used for the first post office and a general store, having been twice moved. The other was buitt in the early days for @ laundry, and was occupied at the time of the fire by a shoe shop. The fire started in that building, evident- ly from an overheated stove. The Root butlding was filled with second hand goods, which were badly dam. bulidings ara in the same half block aged by fire and water. The burned with the Connor hotel, but the guests were not awakened. The amount of damage has not been estimated. STEPHEN D. DAVIS T0 BE U.S. MEMBER OF RIVER COMMISSION CHEYENNE, Wyo., Jan. 10,— Governor W. B. Ross has been notified by Secretary of the Interior Work that President Coolidge will name Stephen D. Davis as the federal government's representative on a commission to settle the ques- tion of disposition of the waters of the North Platte river. Three states—Colorado, Wyoming and Ne braska—are interested in the settle- ment. Delph named as Colorado's representative on the commission, 8. G. Hopkias as Wyoming's representative and ss Nebraski repre- TO BE HEARD BY RADIO Carpenter has been | MAN'S ORCHESTRA Radio fans will be interested to know that Ackerman’s orchestra is broadcasting tomorrow afternoon from the Henshaw hotel’ in Omaha and their program will be on be- tween 5:30 and 7 o'clock Casper time. W. P. (Bill) Ackerman was the leader of the orchestra at the Arkeon here for several months last winter. Headaches from Stight Colds Laxative BROMO QUID relieve the Headache b: n, Coid: A tonic laxative and destroyer. ture of BE. W. Grove, Usement, serm The box bears the signa- 30c.—Adver- arms and hands. rosy-white complexion; also to soothe kept the streets of the city torn up for nearly three years. Four-fitths of he water consumed in Nondon co: from rivers, To Whiten Skin with Lemon The only harm- less way to bleach the skin white is to mix the juice of two lemons with = three ounces of Orchard White, which any druggist will supply for a few cents. Shake well in a _ bottle. i) and you have a whole quarter-pint of the most wonderful skin whitener, softener and beautifier. Massage this sweetly fragrant lemon bleach into the face, neck, It can not irritate. Famous stage beauties use it to bring that clear, youthful skin and red, rough or chapped hands and face. You must mix this remark: able bleach yourself. It can not be bought ready to use because it acts best immediately after it is pre- pared.—Advertisement. on package or on tablets you are not getting the preseribed by twenty-three years for only. tains boxes of twelve tablets cost few cents. 24 and 100. mark Monoaceticacidester of Salicylicacid —Adver! canonized—sainted. Eut when she sks if they would i her back again, each one makes an excuse— all except the rude soldier who had offered the two bits of wood as a cross when she was dying. The play abounds, of course, in keen lines. “Must Christ perish in every generation to save those who have no imagination?” demands a character. “Oh do your best for her if you are quite sure it will not avail,” says Warwick to the bishop. England as usual comes in for caustic comment. “How can what an Englishman believes be heresy?" asks the Chap- lain. And again, “We were not fairly beaten.” Vhile the production is up to the theater Guild's finest standards, the choice of “Winifred Lenithan ne fortunate. She is not heavy enough physically or histrionically for this soldier maid of Domremy. j ASPIRIN | Beware of Imitations! Unless you see the “Bayer Cross” genuine Bayer spirin proved safe by millions and physicians over Headache Lumbago Rheumatism Pain, Pa’ Accept “Bayer Tablets of Aspirin” Each unbroken package con- proven directions. Handy Druggists also sell bottles of Aspirin is the trade of Bayer Manufacture of ement. Sale Discounts Still In Effect At W.G. Perkins HOUSEHOLD LINEN SALE Wiring Supplies FIXTURES, LAMPS, ELECTRIC APPLIANCES Radio Supplies Motor Repairing Electric Supply And Construction Co. 142 E. Midwest Phone 483W Estimate Gladly Furnished PASSENGER CARS $12.50 PER MONTH DEAD STORAGE $8. Absolutely Fireproof Building—Open Night and Day Car Washing The Lee Doud Motor Co. 424 W. Yellowstone .00 PER MONTH Phone 1700 THE 6 Cozy Sleepi THE DORCAS READY AT ONCE Casper’s Finest Apartment House DORCAS 1023 EAST SECOND STREET 8 Thoroughly Modern, Newly-Furnished Apartments ying Rooms ON TWO BUS LINES Rent Figures Will Surprise You 1023 East Second Street APARTMENT Ge Casper Daily Cridune companies: Manufacturing Company. “The reason that Woods Brothers were induced to invest money in the M. E. Smith and Burgess Nash Companies lies in the prospective development of Omaha as a City and the trading territory as a producing section. Omaha is near the heart of the corn belt, which virtually has a monopoly on the corn production of the world. “Within the memory of many residents of Omaha this city was founded and up till less than fifty years ago it was scarcely more than a trading outpost. “With the continued increase in popu- lation the United States will pass the < 200,000,000 mark with this generation, and in my judgment the greatest increase will be noted here in this immediate section. “Experts tell us that the loess soi] which is characteristic of western Iowa and the eastern half of Nebraska insures the highest land valuations of the world in time. “The day.is coming when there will be developed in the western part of Nebraska, South Dakota and Kansas, through the process of irrigation, an We Have Never Missed a Dividend The Burgess-Nash company has never failed to pay regular dividends on any of its securities, in all its long history. No business institution can have a better record than this. We have the utmost confidence in the Profit-Sharing Preferred Shares that we are now selling. The success of our business depends upon our employes and customers. We could not afford to sell them anything in which we did not have the utmost confidence. ‘We know that every one of our employes and customers that buys one or more of these Shares, will be making a profitable Investment. These Profit-Sharing Preferred Shares will pay 7 per cent to the owner, and in addition, after thé Common Shares receive 7 per cent, the Pre- ferred Shares will continue to share in the profits of the business up to a total of 10 per cent. We are selling these Shares at the par value of $100 per Share, either for cash, or on partial payments of $10 per month per Share. We pay interest on monthly payments and your money will be refunded with interest, cn 10 days’ notice any time before final payment. i'Cumulative, Preferred, Tax Free ana Profitable Cumulative: These Shares are Cumulative up to 7 per cent per Share per year, therefore, the company must pay the dividends in full at the rate of 7 per cent per year before one penny of dividends can be paid tu | holders of Common Shares. Way I INVESTED IN OMAHA” BY MARK W. WOODS of Lincoln, Neb. President of Woods Bros., Corporation, director in the following Lincoln Telephone & Telegraph Co., Central Trust Company of Illinois, Burgess-Nash Company, Standard Timber Com- . pany, O’Gara Coal Company, M. E. Smith and Company, Woods: Updike Land Company, and president of Woods Brothers Silo and Burgess-Nash Shares Area Good Investment for You, Too Such men.as Woods Brothers, Ward M. Burgess, S. A. Megeath and other successful business men are heavy owners of the Burgess-Nash Shares. These men put their money in Burgess-Nash Co., because they know Burgess- Nash shares are a safe, conservative and profitable investment. Burgess-Nash Profit-Sharing ~ Preferred Shares Pay 7to 10% PSS Papas eer me x THURSDAY, JANUARY 10, 1924 area of production of unlimited possibilities and the day is near at hand when there will be extensive traffic on the inland rivers including the Missouri an hundred miles upstream from this point. The trunk line railroads from me the west and from the east center in Omaha. One-half million people will reside within its municipal limits in the course of a few years and its retail trade will reach out far to the eastward and into the mountain sections, yes, beyond to the westward. “Like the great retail establishments of New York City and Chicago, I confi- dently expect the business of M. E. Smith and Burgess Nash Companies to grow steadily in volume and attain a magnitude of similar proportions. “The future of this region, than which there is no more fertile on the globe; the future of this city, ideally located and favored as to transportation the future of M. E. Smith and Burgess Nash is a certainty. It only remains for intelligent, enterprising management to attain the highest level of the possibilities.” A New Policy for Burgess-Nash Company Under our Profit-Sharing plan we are permitting our employes, cus- tomers, and other friends, to share in the Profits of Burgess-Nash Co., to the extent of ? to 10 per cent on their money. This plan is a policy of Employe-and-Customer-Ownership, a policy which has been adopted by many of the most successful business insti- tutions of the United States. : To do this, we are selling a limited number of Profit-Sharing Pre- ferred Shares in our Successful Business, the Burgess-Nash Company- We believe our rapidly growing store will become even larger. and will grow faster, when the vast number of our Customers become part owners of the Burgess-Nash Store. Several thousand owners of Shares in our Store will mean several thou- sand more good friends for Burgess-Nash. You can readily sce that this-policy is of benefit to us and to those who buy these Shares. The security is of the highest character, and pays an excellent return on the investment. FILL OUT AND MAIL TODAY fete i ee ee RESERVATION BLANK Tax Free: If you live in Nebraska you will not have to pay any city, county, or state taxes on the money you invest in these Shares. Also you will not have to pay. the present normal Federal Income Tax on the in- come, or money you will receive as dividends, from this investment. Buy Shares From Any Employe BURGESS-NASH Co. “One of America’s Great Stores’’ OMAHA, NEBKASS A Date..... ‘The Burgess-Nash Company, Omaha, Nebraska. Kindly reserve for me .......... Cumulative Profit-Sharing 7% to 10% Preferred Shares of the Bu: -N: ‘b I desire to purchase at $100.00 per shares ne omeRny: wate Payment 1 T will’ make my on Foal uses your payment plan OD wevsececerecesecescsreesens 1924 Signed .... Address ...

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