Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, January 7, 1925, Page 8

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PAGE EIGHT g ships 2 I € rder argest and richest Hindystan heat they an altitude another 500 miles the six airmen and We had a from were flying above the Grand Trunk réad, one of the oldest highways on the road which has resound #4 to the tramp of migrating hordes nd conquerin the early Aryans came down from the plateaus verran arth, wn Never neglect lame muscles Going around half-crippled by Jame mui it’s 80 & with mi needs no rubbi itself does the w are stimula uide By LOWELL THOMAS ia that Ameri rst time came iosity of tation excepting t sess thetr Wonderful View of India © heart | responsi near the easteru ot} s owaway Is Book to World Airman ate and the M s globe- gird) the world flyers roared across long string of camels came plail The excitement and s only exceeded by the haughty fot F G Hers } I " an from Tibet Wells Recites History On this part of the trip the stow he could slither into the cock For six hours they sat jammed together neither cobld hard Our aerial stowaway, like most smbers, hoboes, and stow his being in the cock cramps, country For the first hour we flev ectly above the Ganges. Wells} a this river flows from the brain of| | aid that the Hindoos all belie, B hma, who is one of their trinit of leading gods. Brahma, he went marvelous birdseye view of/on to explain, is the creator of life a. part of India where for thousands and thousands the most important events of human History have taken place To begin flight, destroyer. I had no dif. ficulty in hearing Wells above the roar of the engine, because his mouth was pressed against my ear He also told me that, the Hindoos worship more than thirty million different gods—four times as many gods as there are people in Canada Scenes of Massacres. “About an hour and a half out from Ambala, Wells pointed down, to a city on the banks of the Ganges, and shouted in my ear, “There's Cawnpore.’ According to g ingredients that All druggists have it—35 cent: our prearranged plan, this was one: Try this never-failing treatment start the blood circulating swiftly through the stiff, painful muscles, and this increased supply of fresh, pure blood washes out fatigue poisons and rebuilds broken-down tissue, Marvellously—your lame- ness is gone. Millions know and use Sloan’: 9 e e kills Sloan's Liniment “pain The PlumBing and Heating Business Formerly Conducted by E. J. KAN East First Street purchased and will hereafter be known as the DAWSON PLUMBING AND ~ HEATING CO. PHONE 939 at the Same Address Estimates Furnished REPATR WORK A SPECIALTY ce to face with ited him to pit. Wells sat of seat, wedged 381 set. of controls. He en take off his shoes sc ma up in knowledge of his d geography what he lacked | sical wealth,” Lieut. Ogden He tried to make me forget kpit was for my getting the ing me stories about over which we were the preserver of life, and Che Casper Daily Cribune | BARNEY GOOGLE AND SPARK PLUG \. AND EVERY DIME OF IT \. Te Me wettour a + GUY = L THINK ~~ UP To HIS + AND TAG Hi \ ae SPARKY, PRECIOUS BRown EVEL hs |’ BABY, 2UE GOT B00 BUCKS 1A 1 MY SoeK ALL READY “To BET ON You NEXT SATURDAY {eu -HES IN, BUT IN BED = THERE s, LERS ACROSS THE STREET WAITING For HIM Like A “BIG HEARTED KLIP" LOANED \. GOSH - HES ~ GeneE =~ A LOTTA CRUST “THEY GoT--! WEY. You GUYS GF LOOK PLIVL vo > | WEARD ME AK | SALLY SMOCKX WWE GOT { A LETTER FROM } A HEF A of the places where ws were t shift position in order to get @ bit more comfortable. After we had switched side sin the cockpit and Wells had gractously conceded an- other elghth of an inch of seat to me, he pointed down again to a church spire in an open field ‘Sixty-seven years ago this very month there beneath us was en- acted one of the most frightful tragedies of history. A hundred thousand Indian Sepors, troops whom the British had trained, broke out in mutiny. © Regiment after regiment. not, ohly murdered their officers, but they bayoneted the wives and-children as well. “We flew right over the field where that twenty-one day battle oc- curred. We looked down and saw the staircase at the ‘Massacre ghat’ where the treacherous Nana mur- dered all of the men. In a beautftul green park our stoaway guide point- ed oved the fuselage to a white mon- ument which he said marked’ the well into which the brutal Nana had the women and children hurled “The one thought uppermost in our minds as we looked down on the scene of the Cawnpore massacre was hog easy it would be to fly a thou- sand miles across India and drop énough bombs from the sky in five minutes to put an end to a mutiny of that sort. Evidently the British realize this, because we discovered they hdve a larger alr force here in this one distant part of their em- pire than we have in the whole United States Over Historic Lucknow. “As we were flying over Cawn pore, off to the right we saw another city of mutiny fame, a city that is hallowed ground to every man, wo «nan, and child of British origin. It there at Lucknow that Sir y Lawrence and a handful of fighting men defended their families in the residency against a vast horde of well armed natives who surround ed and shelled them for five months. defense of the residency Lucknow ranks with the battle of the finest fea Marathon a hit the airplane has dor t villzation {it has « the possibility of any ences like the tr pore and Luc “The next signul for Wells and me to shift our positions in c was when city of Agra saw the world our left. H our stows y bro the m of the flight by telling me about thie ancient capital of the Gre tones the argans and relicves Constipation, Biliousness, Headaches. renewing that vigor and good {eel- ing #0 necessary to being well and Used for Over , J0 veare "/ Wales Prima Sak, j? Chips off the Old Block RR JUNIOR SLittlo he AN OLD ChUM OF MINE YOU KNOW- NEVER ANYTHING HAD A LOT OF GOOD TIMES TOGETHER. BE IN TOWN SOON. YOULL LUKE HER BUT We S cOING hing ii The photograph is of the world famous tower of Kutb-Minar, which stands in the city of Dethi, India, visited by the U t tower is of exquisite ¢ a width of 47 fee WON'T THAT Br INTERESTING asa WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 7, 1928 Nou OUGHT To BE ASHAME NOURSELVES ~ TAKING ADVAN AN OLD MAN WHO" 2 WHY DON'T YOU Go To WORK % | AIN‘T NOU GoT ANY PRIDE ZZ | Ne OLO KLIP GoT HIS MoNnEY BY / | “Tue BEADS ON HIS BROW “\ S GoT MON AN’ HERE You BUMS ARE LAYING FOR HIM WHEN YOU OUGHT To 8E DOING Some HONEST WORK -- CLEAR OUT TP) ALL OF You é OR TLECALL THE COPs!! By Billey De Beck SAY, KLIP, TOLD. PAL <9 How ABOUT SLIPPING a i Me A COUPLA HUNDRED SHE'S FULL OF FUN AND WE CAN ALL HAVE & JOLLY TIME TOGETHER. SUCH GOOD SCOLTS AS VOU TWO OUGHT TO KNOW EocH OTHER. he . world flyers. The struction, rises to a height of 238 feet, and at the base to 9 feet at the top. It was p of this tower that the Mogul emperor, in the seventeenth , daily raised his voice in prayer at the rising and setting of the . A. photo). most marvelous , the far famed re made of white ond built by the Moghul Em- ne Wh lies of troops can be transported a Ir dia by plane to within a few hours, where it took weeks and] months but a few yedrs ago. afternoon even when we same great smal) body ¢ clvilians Delhi in the of snowwhite Agra In our itinerary sing just to the right of deserted red city ze Of tha magnificent 1 for an hour ur ascinating sigh It was moder story representatives of the ses haye an opportunity to play a part in the'r capital of th own: government But all around Delhi we saw the ruins of other cities and Wells ex- plained to me has been empires and there are at least eight separ Deihis, Right white buildings near the milky- the British we flew over a ridge with a tall spire, ridge immortalized during the arsenal ar with it rather t mutineers defended where Indian mutiny when a British soildiers and themselves jand families against some 40,000 Indians who surroundedethem on this: rocky bit of ground the crumbling Kashmir gate where John N wet death while leading an a and the. fort rs touched 4 low us we also ruins & the cholson ult, a group of 6f fuse and blew up themselves along 1 surrender to the Greeted by British Flyers. sed to the left. where the great broke / out, ar most’ velet whole world, the where many decisive battler were fought, and where the Moghal vast armies of kings, and where afterWards won his greatest victory “It was near here that we cros over from was, They placed ed dynasty Whirling on from Delhi we pas Meerut, the city of 1857 first directly over the battlefield in ‘the field. of Panipat the founder of overthrew the native Indian Akbar the Great ed the United Proviness to the Punjab, and a shorg while after- ward we arrived above the hangars and,f'eld of the principal royal air force station in comed b Here we were areat crowd of, Brit: | f yal welcomn. tt every facility YALE LACKED aT Ano CAMP By WALTER CAMP (Copyright 1925, Casper Tribune) NEW YORK, Jan. 7.—One of the most interesting points which has been raised in discussion of the writer’s All-American team for 1924 1s the fact that Yale, altho going thru the season tied for leadership with ‘two other eastern teams and undefeated all season, did not win a place on the first All-American eleven. Anyone who studies the history of Yale football will realize that this very fact demonstrates the great- ness of the work done by Tad Jones and his assistant coaches. Having lost practically all their stars, they developed in a period of great stress, @ real team that finished a very shaky, desperate season, with a unit- ed, effective organization and de- feated both Harvard and Princeton. Even these coaches were, decid. edly “up against it’ when they saw their team barely squeak thru the Georgia game, heaved a sigh of relief at a tie with Dartmouth when the latter had the ball on Yale's two foot line with four downs to get {t over and again went thru another tle game with West Point. Certainly that team missed Ma) lory, Milstead, Stevens and Richason, four great men of last year. But they had the fighting spirit and af, ter seven weeks of agonizing effort developed co-ordination ar came thru a finely. working organization in spite of the lack of outstanding stars. . CAL HUBBAR NOT TO STAY AT WYOMING SHREVEPORT, La, Jan. 7.— Long distance communication with Laram{e, Wy yesterday brought the information that Cal Hubbard, captain-elect of the Centenary foot ball squad for 1925, who went to Laramie with the intention of enter- ing the University of Wyoming will return to Shreveport th a few days. It is said Hubbard has changed his plans and Will return to Centenar Paul Rebeshan, ‘center, who left Shreveport Sunday night for the Un ity of Wyoming ts also ex- pected to return. Bard Ferrall, ab sent from the school here and re ported in Wyoming, ts also expected back with Hubbard. It is said the players had been furnished tra portation to Wyoming to. enter school there apd become caniidates for the football team Basket League Managers Will Meet Thursday All team managers of the Cas per Basketiza'l league wil meet th | fre had at our disposal because > fl doss and Arabia.” GASOLINE ALLEY—WALT WANTS TO MAKE EVERYBODY HAPPY 1 KNOW SALLY WILL BE CRAZV ABOUT PHVLLIS THEY'RE THE TWO FINEST GIRLS | EVER KNEW. PLAYER DEALS NOT ALL CARRIED OUT By JOHN B. FOSTER. (Copyright, 1925, Casper Tribune.) NEW YORK, Jan. 7.—Considering the face value of players transferred trom the Pacific Coast league to the major leagues, values determined by the announced price, it is com- puted that $1,275,000 has been spent in the past four years for coast talent . This sum, however, is in excess by several hundred thousands of that which has actually been paid out because some of the deals were part payment deals in which the player had to make good before the full sum was paid and some of’them failed to make good. There were instances in which only the first down payment was made. In the case of Kamm, of the San Francisco club, the total sum of $100,000 was paid, Comiskey'’s check for the full amount having been exhibited. The Glants paid the full price for O'Connell because of the keen competition which existed at the time for the centra! figure in the late bribery scandal In some instances of player trans- fers, where other players figure in the deal, a total amount is named for the entire transaction, the ser- vices of players exchanged being figured out—and figured out at good round sums, It is related of one imajor league manager that he took on a player from the International league for $2,000 on Vriday and quoted him on Monday as worth $5,000 The sale of Statz, of the Los club, to Chicago for $75,000 d as one of the big trans of the coast, but as the ening at 7:80 at a spec in the basement of the Methodist church Bill Stone, president,” urges that every manager take on himself the responsibility of being present as matters of importance will come up for consideration same man owns both clubs {t was merely taking money out of one pocket and putting, it in another. All transactions between Los “An: geles and Chicago are on the sams basts. The Welch transaction between the Seattle club and the Boston’ Na- tionals figured at $50,000 and yet there was nothing like that sum passing between the clubs, as Bos ton players were figured in at sums representing considerably more than thelr worth on the hoof. The so-called $50,000 deal for Wa!- berg ,of which the New York Na tonals were the party of the buying part, {s another which is estimated . It was given out that Walberg was @ $50,000 player anc the report at the time seemed goo: advertising because at the momen: the majors were outbidding eac! other and looking for publicity Now they ere not so keen about it They have had more ‘advertising than they wish as too many of then: have picked flivyers off the plum tree Walberg never. cost the, Giants $50,000 and if he had they would never been as badly, stung as in the O'Connell deal, in which a player was taken before he was ripo and a player who was not of. the typs that McGraw can get as much-out of us some other managers. The sale of Hale to the Athletics was announced at $75,000, but Hale is now quoted as having, gone to the Athletics for 1,000. Of all the transactions of, recent years between the coast, and the majors, none has been mofe’ ro mune than the exchange b which Detroit’ got Blue, Bassler Pillette and Johnson—but tho f two really belonged to Detroit in the first plaoo and were, olit. in California getting seasoned Le a a A Birthday cards for every member of the family at Hoffbines, Beck- £ linger Bide For results try a Classified ad FREE—Consultation, Charges so low as to be » and_payments arranged to suit Consultation free Hours, 9 a.m. to l p. m Men Only! 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