Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, January 1, 1925, Page 2

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y ‘THURSDAY, JANUARY 1, 1925 Bs Rhett Lc eee eee person arrested. He was charged with violating the fed’ al dry law, and gave bail immed-atuy. The at- PAGE TWO. Che Casver Daily Cribune fair was held in honor of the Penn sylvania-University of Califorpta football game today. ‘|ALUMNI ON ® Fd IOVIE RELIE FUND FORMED BY THE STARS Charity for the Aged, Sick and dndigent Will Be Aim. SACRAMENTO, Cal., Jan, 1— Headed by a group of celebrities of the motion pcture colony of Holly: wood, the Motion Picture Relief Fund of Ameri yesterday filed articles of incorporation with Secre: ary of State Frank C, Jordan. Objects of the organization, which is a non-profit concern with head Hollywood and Los An- 1 be to car aged, sick th The orgarization also plans t promote the welfare of the familic of the aged, sick and indigent mem bers of the profession. Ei n of a large ably fortunate members of the sion and families of motion picture people who are unable to support themselves because of age or illness and death is planned. The following are directors of the newly formed organization, all of whom are prominent in the motion picture colony: wood Nowell, Hal E. Roach, Rupert Hughes, L, T. Hallberg, Mae Murray, Charles Chaplin, Mitchell Lewis, Rob ‘Wagner, BHwell D. Moore rles H. Christie, Harold m §. Hart, W. T. Wy- Donald Crisp, Cohn, Mary Pickford, Doug ks, Fred W Beetson, Victor H. Clarke, Cecil B. De Bille, Mary H. O'Connor, John W. Cons dene, Jr, Jesse L. Lasky, Winifred Kingston Farnum, Joseph M. Schenck, Joseph De Gragse and Glen Harper. PROGRESS OF SCIENCE TOLD home, prob: IN GATHERING WASHINGTON, Jan. 1—BScient {sta attending the annual convoca- tion of the American association for the advancement of science, ushered in the New Year today with further disclosures of scientific progress that pointed the way to important accomplishments in the dawning Year. Soores of papers, many dealing with highly specialized and abstract subjects that hold only suggestive interest for the laymen, were pre- pared for today's various sectional mectings of the convention, “'Temperamental temperatures" as a mark of American weather were discussed in a paper by Dr. Willis I. Milham, professor of Meteorogoy at Williams’ Co lege. The problem of why the weather has abnormal streaks of long dura- tion ‘has not yet been solved, he sald, but some prcgress has been made in that direction Volcanic eruptions that throw a yell of fine dust between the earth and sun and changes in the sun it- self, as shown by the number of sun spots, and the amount of heat con veyed to the earth's surface, were among factors believed tobe of ma- terial influence, he said, BANDIT KILLS STORE OWNER BALTIMORD, Md., Jan. 1—Sam. uel Gresser, 30 years old, was. shot and killed jast ni in his grocery by an unidentified bandit who es caped Less than an hour wom sex Isct earlier, two were shot and killed at Es vey were Mrs. Pauline Wind rs old, and Mrs, Bertha 4 Windisch, 44, husband of Windisch surrendered to the Mrg. Windisch left her hus. band three! months ago 1924 SLOW IN GOAL INDUSTRY INDIANAPY ; 1 ‘The y police Poor one for industry, said m the head quarters ¢ d Mine W rk-| ers of | companies in Kentacky fol y of cut-throat 1 the entire Indus- siness, They who protest’ «Then they e of their coal gain « get b f thelr miners, * wages 1 again they reduced the price of al. They have followed this pro ram until thelr employes are now rking for starvation wages Tho United Mine America proposes to tniseraMe tlaves. It proposes to ¢ them and place them on her level of life, This could n omplished in 1924 can be taken in 026,” t the r Workers. of help these atep. in Hollywood, to care for un-| profes: | eee t] SEEN EY bile enamel shimmered in the light. ideas of efficiency Her fecks were clean enough to eat from. And the crew proved another stunner. hafr cuts and their clothes were of the latest cut. way—and, sober’ The lowest paid deckhand was getting $5 a day. They went up town For Old-time sailors in New Orleans just looked and gasped when they saw Henry Ford's ship Oneida lying at dock. They'd never seen anything so sleek and shiny in all their lives. Her hull gleamed in shining automo- In her engine room brass and nickle-plate trimmings ‘The men were all clean shaven, with fresh in taxia and came back the same Henry Ford (in inset) has put Ford in hig ship-operating venture, too. And he’s found {t pays. Ca ira The se sheencet of John Drinkwater (in inset), who wrote the drama “Abraham Lincoln," to Daisy Kennedy (above), the violinist, has been announced. The raarriage will be Drinkwater's second. ‘She'll Wed Drinkwater Guthrie Man Is Winner Of Vail Medal ST. LOUIE Mo., Jan, 1 hundreds ts performed by ne comy t — After of daring employes of tele out the untry, the national committee of ward of the American. Telep and Telegraph company of York, adjudged C, E. Rider of Guth- rie, Ok’a,, the winner of thé Vall gold medal of the Scuthwestern Tele: 425 W. Yellowstone bring you a full measure of happiness and pros- perity. Lincoln Street Hospital 747 South Lincoln HAPPY NEW YEAR Let's hope our wrecker will be more than busy during the NEW YEAR. KEMMER BODY AND FENDER SHOP The Season's Greetings We heartily wish you the season’s greetings and assure you of our keen appreciation of your good will and patronage. phone company for the most out standing herolo deed performed tr 1924, it was announce@by local offi cers of the company. Rider, a lineman, several miles against a current an¢ through blazing gasoline floating cn the Cimmarron river to restore the broken wires between Chicago anc Galveston. egies PARIS—The Parisienne tn the new spring wraps may to raise her voice but not h unless she lifts the garment them. The sleeves, which are large are attached to the body ment as low down as the one o be able hip line, leaving the arm free only from the elbow. Phone -2008 May the New, Year Phone 2706 the English playwright rowed a boat arms with of the gar-| |Montana Takes New Place In Export List WASHINGTON, Jan. 1.—Montana umpeg* from forty-first to thirty- ighth® place in=the relative’ stand- ng of states in the Union with respect to merchandise’ exports for the quarter ended September 30, 1924, says a bulletin made public by the department “of commerce today. Reaching figures of $1,407,710, as compared with $1,189,972 and $1,- 7,006 for the first and second quar- rs of the year, Montana continued onward march. Shipments of ores, metals and manufactures are the commodity classifications mak- ing up ehlefly the exports of Mon- tana during the three months. Ship- ments during this period were valued at $950,604. Montana's spec- tacular rise displaced Wyoming, Arizona, and Delaware on. the list. jrand totals for the first nine months of 1924 give Montana export figures of $3,854,688; Wyoming, just ahead on the list, shipped $17,642 more goods than its northern neigh- bor, while Colorado fell by the way- side to the amount of $1,717,302. The first ten states in the tabula- tion and the amou Tino! 755,! 54,374,555; Jersey Louisiana, $46,470. $39,715,744; Ohio, Massachysptts, $2 California, $49,852,174; Michigan, $81,071,894; and 446. For results try a Tribune Classt- Hed Adi” Townsend Building n 1 ral Tribune Building from the International With a Big Wish for i Casper May She Be Bigger, Better and_ More Prosperous than Ever Before. PELTON & HEMRY. Inc. Betty Says— HAPPY NEW YEAR Her New Year's resolution is to win still more satisfied customers than she has in the past. Quality Work Will Do It Betty's Beauty Parlor AIL PILOT'S TRAGIC GnASH lo REVIEWED Official Report Gives Details of Accident To Paul P. Scott. OMAHA, Neb., Jan. 1.—Conditions accompanying the crash of Paul P. Scott, airmail pilot, near Elko, Ne- vada, December 29, as related in the official report of the accident to air- mafl superintendent Carl ~Egge, brought that incident into close riv- alry with that of Major Frederick L. Martin, who flew his plane into the side of an ice-covered mountain in Alaska last spring, and was forced to abandon leadership of the army around tho world flight. Major Martin, after crashing into the mountain, was the object of an official search by scores of persons in goverfiment planes and United States ships which toured the Icy waters of the Arctic region for days, only to find his way into a village of that frozen country, and make known! his whereabouts. According to the report of the Scott incident, the pilot, flying at an altitude of 7,500 feet, crashed into a mountain forty miles west of Elko when he ran into a heavy fog, en route from Salt Lake City to Reno. Scott's shoulder was broken in the crash, but despite this, he walked twelve miles in a temperature of forty degrees below, zero,. to the Southern Pacific Railroad track where he flagged the first train. On the same day, the report con tinued Pilot Henry §. Boomstra, It Cheyenne, Wyoming, with the west bound mall, in a sixty mile | gale. He landed at the emergency field at Federal, Wyoming, 18 miles awny, one hour and 18 minutes after he took off from Cheyenne, making an average speed of less than fifteen miles per hour. PRINTERS GO ON STRIKE NEWCASTLE, Penn., Jan. 1.— The Newcastle News was unable to publish today, owing to the refusal of printers to work unless their de mands for a weekly increase of $5 was met by the management. All but two or three job printing shops in the city also were unable to op erate, ‘The printers who refused to work were said to be members of the In. ternational Typographical union: but employers declared their re fusal was without authorization Phone 292 Phone 467-J WISHING EVERYBODY ‘A Prosperous and Happy New Year W. V. JOHNSTON THE CARPENTER 915 South McKinley . Phone 2628-J | BIG PARTY ARE RAIDED SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 1—Pro- hibition enforcement officers early today raided a banquet in the Latin quarter here, said to have been held under the auspices of University of Pennsylvania alumni members here. John Allen, who said he waa a Pennsylvania alumnus, was the only Beauty A Gleamy Mass of Hair 35¢ “Danderine” does Wonders for Any Girl’s Hair Girls! and dre your derine hair. can Try this! When combing ing your hair, just moisten r-brush with a little “Dan- and brush it through your The effect is startling! You do your hair up tmmediately and it will appear twice as thick and heavy—a mass of gleamy hair, sparkling with Ife and possessing that incomparable softness, {fresh ness and luxuriance. While beautifying the hair “Dan- derine” is also toning and stimulat- ph single hair to grow thick, d strong. Hair stops falling d dandruff disappears. Get a bottle of ‘“Dunderine” at any drug or toilet counter and just see how healthy and youthful’ your hair ap- pears after this delightful, refresh- ing _dressing.—Adv. wishes, lnm ! Let us forget the past and turn our * faces to the New Year with added cour- age to carry on the work of construction, both in the physical and mental senses. CASPER CAB CO. Stephen Dreher, Prop. HAPPY NEW YEAR We appreciate the benefits of the past year and look confidently forward to the future. SANITARY WET WASH LAUNDRY. 228 West K Street ; Phone 2282 LL LLL cA Happy New Year to our friends and patrons, and to our loyal employes, we extend best We thank you for the wonderful support given us in the past year and look forward to serving you even more efficiently during 1925. Casper Motor To Our Friends ae We express a sincere appreciation for your 1924 patronage and good will and extend to you best wishes for 1925. AMERICAN CAFE 244 South Center St. Phone 2316 IR 4 LTS ANNO ATA na ~ Bus Line 0. A

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