Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, September 29, 1924, Page 2

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PAGE Two. Ps i, Pag 2 Es “Dude” Granddaughters of John D. Rockefeller Being ‘Measured for Saddle on Wooden Horse ate and G Me- anddaughters of Tonk D.| aude when’ @ cued & om rs we al- | dertoot ts to be fittea to a cowboy astride one of the wood- | Saddle Gas Masks for Mail Clerk I, ered .mall equipping the se of gas b: R > 1 in Miwaukee, lout, Til By NEA Airmail Service— This is the senatorial committee that is conducting the investigation into the treasufy department, ed from left to right, are Senators Wil- liam H. Kin James Couzens, chairman and Richard Ernst, Standir mittee. Militarism Still Lives! By NEA Airmail Service— Militarism isn’t dead in Germany by any m s. And here's proof of it board the batiteship E over, lying at anchor at lined up for inspection, Defense Minister Gessler (in civilian attire) and Admiral Behyke are giving them the once-over, Dayis, attorneys for the com- | hrough Franks Hi — Nearly 2000 people milled and jammed through the home of Jacob Franks at Chicago to attend the auction gale of the Franks houschold furnishings. They were eager to glimpse the inside of the home in which Robert Franks, schoolboy, hed lived before his life was smashed out by a chisel after he was kidnaped by Richerd Loeb and Nathan Leopold. The Frunks have sold their home and are moving away. where. What ‘Tornado Did to Steel Trestle By NEA Airmail Service— Frances Ann Saunders, 16, of] sy NEA Airmail Service— now. judging from his smile. Only relatives know Wichita Falls, Texas, lost a million President Coolidge regrets losing his assistant secretary of navy. But dollars in the settlement of the Red | at the same time he wishes Colonel Theodore Roosevelt the best of luck as River boundary dispute. But she’s |he bids him goodbye. If Teddy shou’d defeat Al Smith in the New York getting plenty more money. Her oil! gubernatorial elections, the Empire State is safe for “Cal” the poll: lands are worth several million right| cicians figure. And the president seem to feel the same way about {3 faeneeenraee ~ ony! T _A Thing of Beauty Should Be a Joy Forever HATS ARE Pretty (0CH OF A NUISANCE By NEA Airmail Service— Germany still has a navy. Though she surrendered a good ‘many of her ships to the allies after the armistice, she still has quite a few left. Here are some of her battleships and cruisers at anchor in the bay of Swinemunde. By NEA Airmall Service— Brig. Gen. Charles G. Dawes went to St. Paul but not for a.campalgn speech. He went to the American Legion's natiopal convention, This was a 120-foot steel bridge before the tornado came. But it might have been so much cardboard for|a plain legionnaire. Here he is seen marching with fellow members of all the wind cared. It was a railroad trestle on the Soo line, near Withee, Wis. Fifty were killed in the storm.|the Evanston (IIL) post in the big parade held in conjunction with the conclave, By NEA Airmail Service— William Gibbs McAdoo, back from Europe, has decided to Iet bygones be bygones and enter the fight to put John W. Davis in the White House Here the defeated candidate for the Democratic nomination is assuring Davis he will do all In his power to bring about his election. It was their first meeting since the New York convention. Dawes in Legion Parade By NEA Airmail Service— The queen of the seas, the giant American 1 blade off one of her propellers out in mid-ocean on h didn’t keep hor from completing her tri ton drydock uve seen repairing the damage, When Leviathan Lost a ‘Fin’ ner Leviathan, lost a last trip, But_ that ip. Here workmen in the South Bos- Peacemakers, Rey. Warren L. Steeves, pastor of First Baptist Church in Lima, 0O., and his wife (gbove) run a domestic relations bureau for their congrega ton. They have been successful ig catching up threatening divorces of some of their flock Fast Flyer 4 Airmail Service— autz flew from Sel- fridge Field at Mt. Clemons, Mich., in three hours and two minutes. Flying conditions were reported as “only fair.” He had been called in for a conference with Major General Mason M. Patrick, chief of the air service, 4 Noted Automotive Engineer ‘Lauds sn accnebssecese Harrison Boyce “Newspapers, particularly thé smaller ones, speed American pr gress," said Harrison Boyce, ¢ inventer of the motometer boyce-ite, a fuel ingredient, which, it is said, is revolutionizing the oll industry by increasing gasolil mileage through carbon prevention. In a statement made before as Sociates, advertising and news- paper men, Boyce declared that the medium and smaller news- Papers collectively have a greater influence on American thought and progress than a few large papers in large cities, “Together, the medium and smaller newspapers constitute the Breat mass of important news- Paper circulation,” said Boyce. “They dre generally very carefully read, front to back, and have @ strong and intimate personal in terest for the reader,’t

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