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TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1924. EPIDEMIC TOLL | 15 STAGGERING IN JAPAN ISLES Yokohama Invaded by}, Sleeping Sickness; Hundreds Dead. By FRANK M. HEDGES (United Press Staff Department) TOKIO, Sept. 2—On the eve of Japan's first anniversary of the earthquake which shattered Tokio and Yokohama and left ruin and death in its wake, sleeping sickness has-suddenly cast its pall over the island, After raging over Shikoku, the Che Casper Daily Crivune San Francisco was made a little over a month ago. ‘The fact that jack's gumshoe trip up here be- came known was not his fauit. Somebody spotted him hidden away in.tbe back seat of a local theater PAGE FIVE. that time was sald already to haye budded. So when Jaci came to the const to earn a million—also a per- centage of the net receipts—for doing film heroics, Kearns arranged with tho movie company for Miss box and from all reports the cham-|-raylor to come out and be the lead- pion was not entirely pleased” at} ing lady, ‘Under the circumstances, being recognized. it would seem that the present Furthermore, dhring his visit | allyged affection of Jack and Estelie here, Jack did not see fit to register | was no sudden night blooming cerus at any of the big downtown hi or “outa-sight, outa-mind” affair, Just where he stopped is still a! Atso there is that matter of Jack mystery. recently having had a beauty doctor Should it turn out that Dempsey] worl on him. Love, assert experts and Miss Taylor hope tO marry,j/in suca things, ts the greatest already haye arranged to get mar-|known stimulant to the sale of ried—or are already married—they| talcums, massage creams, perfumes can thank the heavywelght cham- new" noses. Heavyweight Pion's manager, “Handsome Jack’ pions may be no exception to Kearns for p'aying the role of cupid. | the rule. Most managers of prize fighters look upon marriage belis for their meal tickets as nothing less than plain poison. Not so Kearns. It was Kearns who first noted the The only girl in the field division | on temporary duty in Salt Lake corel of the United States air mail ser-| Her work consists in checking vice—tha Miss Helen Bullis, of] planes in and out and sorting the ev... who recently has been} mai! as {t arrives. ‘Used Kelloge’s Bran 2 months— constipation gone after suffering 3 years ‘Three years of suffering with con- stipation. What happiness was his when Kellogg’s Bran, and krumbled, restored his health. But read his letter. “Dear Sirs: sures—with brans which are only part bran. It takes ALL bran to be 109 per cent effective, Because Kellogg’s Bran is ALL 6 bran it sweeps, cleans and purifies tho intestine. It acts nat as naturo acts. ction regu n larly. pd to bi sults, or your grocer will r money. Kellogg’s Bran has a like flavor. Quito differ nary, unpalat BUSSES 3 Busses a Day Each Way LEAVE CASPER Townsend Hotel || 8 a.m, 10 a, m., 2:30 p. m LEAVE SALT CREEK 8 a. m, 2 p. m., 5:30 p, m, BAGGAGE AND EXPRESS Bus Leaves 9:80 Daily Salt Creek Transportation your krum! bi ‘without it for anything in ++ + for three years I used all kinds of medicines for constipation, and only got temporary relief. I was advised by a doct: UB St In Roumania women are employed _gomennetien Seen rt 8” as building laborers and thrive in the bgt inal of this letter fe file work. They are all gypsies, and in (The original of ortyg friendly urge between Jack and fair| every town they may be seen, with FEN 9 Se al tence Dore Eat two tablespoons Estelle when the latter was playing| their short skirts well tucked up, ? } Mig ie tfohia cance, vith tho’ same theater engagemnts with |ictimbing up ladders with thelr paila| .Relloge’s Bran brings resulta be. | Bran every, day_in chironic cases, with Company the Manassa.mauler back east sev- of cement or loads of bricks on Sane cthattetion waite haléwagrdaene (Goud hy altigtocers, nerd he TELEPHONE 144 eral months ‘ngo.- ‘The romance at their backs. +88! ———— Coolidge knows how movies are made now. Thomas Edison sickness has invaded Yokohama and the Kobe district. On the island of Shikoku, 1 cases have been re- ‘Three cases thes far hay ‘overed in Yokohama while over 190 caxes are reported in the Kobe cistrict. Tt ham beer it aread User Japan. —— years since the ‘aa appeared tn Setting the Styles PARIS.—One of the most chic of tatlored frocks for early autumn is made of rose biege silk crepe. It has groups of long, narrow tucks on both bodice and skirt, though the General effect is tubular. A collar fastening right up to the throat with many little pearl buttons is a distinctive feature, PARIS.—Even the scarf. and ostrich boa have become flesh color now, This is in keeping with the fad for flesh-tinted accessories such as gloves, hostery and wrist bage. NEW YORK.—Suede Js not quite so smart as leather for afternoon shoes just now. Pumps in bronze kidskin are in vogue, though satin May be used if preferred. NEW YORK.—The really smart hat of this season is a soft black of black satin, faile or felt. It hag a brooch of brilliants. “TRUE FASCINATION,” Said the Countess--- “begins, for women, in the Roeensiak of that luminous bloom of richly lus- trous hair! Every woman can possess it. She need onl use a touch o henna in the sham- poo.” dustthe right touch in HENNAFOAM SHAMPOO FOR SALE BY The Casper Pharmacy, 111 East Second Street. Drngs and Jewelry ‘The Kimball Drug Store, 214 South Center Street (Two Stores for Your Convenience) The John Tripeny Company, 241 South Center Street Drugs and Jewelry Midwest Pharmacy of the Kimball Store (Two Stores for Your Convenience) Midwest Building $5.00 Rewar Five doilars revard wi be paid to the y furnishing the Casper Daly Tribune information leacing to the capture of the person Avho iy fraudulently collecting subscriptions from ‘Tribune subscribers. Patrons of the paper should not pay any- one their subscription except the carrier who delivers the paper cr an authorized collector from the oftice. if you are not sure you are paying the right collector, ask kim to show his credentials. If he can not _do so please call the Tribune. Telephone 15 Prove | the elect President who with Henry Ford and Harvey Firestone dropyed down to the presi- dent's father’s farm near Plymouth, Vt., the other day, showed him all about It. The flivver king piayed the leading role in the one-reel comedy vical wizard shot. But there’s little likelihood it ever will be shown In your neighborhood theater. By 0. L. SCOTT (Staff Correspondent of The cine’ Tribune.) (Copyright 1924, Con, Press Assn.) UnmICAGO, Sept, 2—Ma” Stree- ter, entrenched on her sloop “Va- moose” just outside her own dees- trik” of Lake Michigan, is again mixing with the minions of the law, trying tO get herself into trouble. “Ma" believes in the precepts ‘and Practices of old “Cap'n” Streeter who, for more than 30 years, fought the state of Illinois, claiming tme his property right under “squatter Iaw to about $100,000,- 000 worth of Chicago’s front yard along the lake. The “Cap'n” always belieyed in gunnery to bring people around to his view of things. So “Ma” who inherited his sloop ‘“‘Vamoose,” when accidentally rammed the other night by the excursion steamer -Minteral City, vowed revenge. She chased when they came to settle for dam- courts would not have figured in this latest escapade of the ‘“dees- trik” jf a bulet from the Vamoose had not taken the tip off the nose \2,John Biafore, foreman on the Mineral City, a night or two later. “Ma” advises she “aint saying’ who fired the shot,” but adm'ts one was fired. Now they are trying to get out a warrant for her arrest on a charge of shooting with intent to kill. With the same bravado that char- acterized her deceased mariner hus- band, she tells the ship's captain and the whole ship's crew to get any blankety blank kind of a war- rant they want, she “ain't skeered” of the whole outfit. “Ma” has other things to -think about. One of them is her recently ‘nstituted suit to recover $100,000,- 000 in hara cash for property in the “Deestrik of Lake Michigan” which the ‘“‘cap'n” claimed was his by squatter right and by creation. She {s carrying on her husband's bat- tle against the state unrelentingly with the $100,000,000 as the stake. Twice courts have turned down his pleas and decided that 1500 pur- By L. ©. OWEN (Staff Correspondent of The Casper Tribune.) (Copyright, 1924, Consolidated Press Association.) SA® FRANCISCO, Sept. 2.—Is Jack Dempsey, the heavyweight king, engaged to be wed? Are he and Estelle Taylor, pretty film star, who left Los Angeles Glycerine Mixture for Gas on Stomach Simple glycerina, buckthorn bark, etc., as mixed in Adlerika, helps any caso gas on the Stomach in ten min- utes. Most medicines act only on lower bowel but Adierika acts on both upper and lower bowel and re- moves all gasses and poisons. Brings out matter you never thought was in your system, Bx- cellent for obstinate constipation. Guards against appendicitis. Casper Pharmecy, 111 EB. Second St., Cas- per.—Adv. ‘ _ | THE NICOLAYSEN LUMBER CO. Everything in Building Material . RIG TIMBERS Three-Day Cementing Phone 2300 and 62 FARM MACHINERY, WAGONS Distributors of KONSET Office and Yard—First and Center Sts. JOIN THE AMERICAN LEGION NOW A SPECIALTY Process for Oil Weils. Casper, Wyo. that | “Ma” Streeter Hurls Defy _ Ship’s Crew and the | Law in Chicago Turmoil Is Jack Dempsey Married Or Going To Be? Friends On Coast Believe Rumor chasers of the Lake front property have title to the land which a few years ago was part of Lake Michi. gan. Not so “Ma.” She won't even live on land because of the tactics of landlubbers, who have beaten the captain in his fight. Her sloop Va- moose cruises up and down the “Deestrik,” hopeful of a steady an- choring place one of these days when some court can be found—if it-ean—to change ownership of the land, The whole thing started back In 1886 when Captain George Welling- ton Streeter was shipwrecked in the steamer Reutan off the Chicago ain fitted up the hulk and started raising his family right where the disaster occurred. He built a breakwater out into the ake. Nature tock care of the rest, created a whole new stretch of shore line, which the captain clatm- od. squatter, His first tiff with the law came n 1889 and was continued at inter- vals for the next 35 years. Al’ the “me old Captain Streeter kept hie sot gun handy and used it once with teling effect. Thereafter he spent a few years in the state pen- tentiary for mans'aughter. But he always refused to budge from his district, which he claimed was a sov- ereign state, not subsect to the laws of Illinois, and under the jurisdic tion of the federal government alone. Through all these years, the prop- erty was created by building hir breakwater begame immensely val- uable and is now the nucleus of Chicago's rich lake front. “Ma” Streeter, out in her sloop, contends that the land is her own and she won't budge from her po- sition, won’t have anything to do with the rest of the world until she gets it: That is why a pot shot or two at strangers fail to bother her. She tells interviewers that she can take care of herrelf and that others should watch out for themselves, All she wants, she says, are her rights, which as she sees {t, amount to something more than $100,000,000. aboard the same train with the monarch of maulers, planning to murmur a duetic “I do” some time before or right after they reach the Atlantic seaboard? Last, but not least, are Jack and Estelle already hitched? Offhand, the last may sound like a wild conjecture, but out here on the Pacific coast, there are a lot of “Jack's” close friends who believe it's so, Also there are a few cir- cumstantial facts which might indi- cate it’s so. To start with, for persons who are already known to entertain a very kindly regard for each other, Demp- sey and Miss Taylor are cloaking themselves with a lot of sangfroid when prying interviewers show up. The same variety of sangfrold, it is pointed out by would-be psycholo- gists, frequently manifests itself in persons who already have made a surreptitious trip to the altar and who, having a secret all their own, sit back and chuckle while the world at large tries to pry into their heart affairs. However, there is more to this “secret marriage” talk than mere rumor and amateur ventures into newlywed psychology. For instance: Will Champion Dempsey “please cast a little ight on his recent ten day Gsappearance from his Los Angeles movie job, during which he made a very ostentatious “almost secret" visit to San Francisco? Will Miss Taylor Mkewtse help clear up the mystery by telling how come she tool a vacation from Los Angeles movie activities coincident to tho tomporary flitting of Mr, Dempsoy? Will the elderly ond beautific Carl Laemmlie, who is paying Jack a round million for being a hand«ome movio hero, please affirm or deny the report that Miss Taylor came to him some two months ago and asked him to scratch out of-her contract a elauso which prohibited her from taking a husband? A Dempsey’s“‘almost secret’ visit to have been spared. “His False Standard”—in True Story Magazine for October is a story - of the sowing of wild oats—and the reaping of a crop of agony. It’s a powerful, gripping tale that rings true indictment of swift court- shipand hasty marriage and drives home a lesson and a warning you won't soon forget. “What Every Woman Hopes” — Living ina coun- try neighborhood where the young men ogled her and sought opportunities to meet heralone, Madge came to believe that all men are beasts—that all love is dis- gusting—and that no temp- tation of city life could ever lure herintopathsof wrong. But Madge did not know the city. She did not know how easyandattractiveeach little downward step is made, and how fiercely she was to have to battle for her soul and happiness. Every girl who longs for city-lifechouldreadMadge’s story. “The Network of Fate”—When Janet concealed from her husband the fact that Wi Oats Dan took Evelyn in his arms and told her that he loved her she believed him. ignorance of life she had no way of knowing that he was not in earnest, that he was sowing his wild oats— that his intentions were far from being what she thought they were. If she could have looked into his heart and seen the evil there; if she could have known that he was fol- lowing the advice of a cynical friend who had said to him “To win success ee must know life—especially omen,” Had she known that she wasonly one of many girls into whose ears he had poured the same sweet sounding words, what a world of shame and degradation she would In her So when She “Out of the Depths” The $1,000 Prize Story When other children were being schooled in their A B C's little Jean was being schooled by a master pickpocket. ‘When she was ten years old she could Hit a wallet or a roll of bills so deftly from @ pocket that the victim would never Fealize {t—until too! And then when e! eighteen, her turned her ta ckmailing. were all past masters atthe game. When she graduated from this school she was accepted in the most exclusive circles of id her beauty, her charm, her ways brought her into contact with many men—had they only known what Iny behind those blue eyes, that winning smile, that soft voice,they would have been frozen in thelr tracks. ‘Then Fate plunged loveinto her iifeand twisted two lives out of shape. Her own and her victim's. But who would believe the truth from a girl who had squeezed $50,000 out of a rich man for some love letters. Then came the truth—remorse— ssion, love. You've probably! such anunusual heart gripping story as “Out of the Depths,” which appears in the October True Story Magazine. And you {t deserves to win thi his frier.d and financial backer, had made improper advances toward her—she be- lieved th.t her silence was the only way to save her husband from financial ruin, The story of her suffering and despair before she could prove her innocence and of how she ‘True Sto because it is true, every word, every episode, every character—all except the names which for obvious reasons have to be disguised. If every man and woman could read it, could see the broken hearts and ruined hopes, could know the days and nights of remorse and tears, and witness the grim retribution that fate eventually bestowed, few would risk such pun- ishment to achieve a questionable degree of false success—no young man would trifle with a woman's love and no girl would give her heart to any man until she had made sure that his intentions were honorable and his character above reproach. If you area young man,or woman, mother or father with children whose interests you have at heart do not fail to read this thrilling lesson taken straight frorn life so that you or yours may be spared the agony and grief that Evelyn was called upon to endure because she was ignorant of the ways of life—and men, ‘ Other Absorbing Stories from Life Here are Just a Few of the Unusual Features in the October Issue of True Story Magazine “Her Final Choice”—slighted all her life by indifferent relatives, Nina, an orphan, had always hungered for love. Peter Hodge came into her life, she fell an easy prey to his seeming devotion. little realized that 1n throwing herself hastily into his arms, sire was inviting not only the bitterest suffering and remorse, but actual tragedy. This pathetic life story is a terrific literally clawed her way out of hell is one of the most heartgripping, truly helpful narratives that has been published in True Story Magazine. “You Belong to Me”—Alice's greatest weakness was that of being too easily led. When Avery Holson, whom she hated, bul- lied her into a loveless marriage, she was A single copy will Out the 15th of the month—25c. Dream World A Macfadden Publication afraid to withdraw from an alliance that was both wick- ed and loathsome to her. Had she only been properly taught from her childhood days, what agony of mind and soul she might have escaped! True Story Maga- zine has published many true life narratives but none that teach a more powerful moral lesson than this. “After the Storm”— Like many another girl she had dreamed ofa handsome lover that, like a knight of old, would some day come for her. Andas time went by, and no such lover came, she suddenly conceived a daring plan. Whht the plan was—through what perils it carried her and the amaz- ing outcome of her experi- ence in “the palace of love” —is a true life story of in- tense dramatic power that should be a solemn warning to every girl who is given to idle dreaming about love. Read Also in the October True Story “When Fear Took Flight’ “His Great Temptation” “Board and Lodging” “Forever After” “The Part of a Fool’” “Thet Brot of Mabel’s’” A Macjadden Publication CMagazine ) 25 October Issue Now on Sale A delightful monthly journey to the land of love and romance awaits you in Dream World—the magazine of beautiful stories. make you a regular reader. No more fasciha each month in Magazine. Your newsstand hag it. Qut the 23rd of the month—25c “*During those awful days of suspense both as to Evelyn's fate and mine, Ipasred through hell-fires of suffering... . and I learned that I loved Evelyn, loved her asaman loves sunshine, and woods, and rivers, andall natural, wholesome things."” —from “'His False Standard" in True Story for October, The Gage of Battle In this country today a mighty conflict is raging. The forces of Evil are battling tirelessly to destroy all that is clean, wholesome, vir- tuous and good. The favorite weapons of Evil are deceit, treachery, cunning. Afraid to advance into fair and open battle, it slinks in the shadows and attacks in the dark. It invades our homes, offices, factories, It lurks in the highways and byways. Its prey is the innocent, the ig- norant, the misinformed. Against its attacks mere moralizing avails little. The fight calls for action—determined, fearless, bold. TrueStory Magazine, as,edited and published by Bernarr Macfadden represents that kind of action. It has thrown itself aggressively into the fight Right from the start, Trve Story Magazine expected criticism— and gotit. It also expected the active support of all clear-thinking righteous men and women who are striving for the betterment of humanity—and it received that, too. Every day this great publica- tion receives new evidence of its tremendous power for Good. True Story has and needs but one weapon—the sword of Truth. If it can help men and women, boys and girls, to live cleaner, purer lives; if it can save others the heartache, the suffering, that follows a course of evil as sur-ly as day follows night—it will have gone farin its triumphant battle for Right. Use This Coupon If You Cannot Get True Story At Your Newsstand Special Opportunity Coupon SEND NO MONEY NOW Mail Service Department TRUE STORY MAGAZINE < 4th Street and Broadway, New York City ‘ Pl enter my name on your/Mailing Het to receive ‘fra Story Magagine for one year staiting with the October issue, 1 and bill me atiyéer special! Pi cad of $2.50, Ireserve the right to cancsi in casgJPart novesdrely satisfied. Namo. Street_____{___. City. ing stories are being ritten than th: » which appear True Rome ces— tie sister publication to True Story TrueRomances A Macfadden Publication