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, ( PAGE FOUR Van t= NIMELESS STORY PLAYS FINAL TIMES TOON, A GOTHAM FILM COMING: final showings of the Para. “The Story Without Agn Ayres and} the © the agreat cast t of the princir playing tn Richard Dix Film I 1 Dix has att fon of Jeffery amensely popular novel, Biteie ‘ ° Dix has the role of active ng New Yorker wacse s had left him more mil ons than he'll ever know what to with } is bored by the dull MR. D. ZELINKA 4 a Stomach Bloated With Gas Was His Worry yf. Mr. D. Zelinka of 15 Street, N. Y., writes want you to know that no day passed for months and months that did pot find my stomach bloated with gas and shoot ing pains darting through my stom- ach. [ felt he at times, but as soon as I started cating, food nause- ated me and I became bilious. My tongue was coated, had bad taste and breath was offensive. I never thought this could all be from my liver, but my liver it must have been, for the y first day after taking your won- arter's Little Liver Pi a new person. The WANTED POSITION AS HOUSE. KEEPER | reliable middle-aged woman. Best of refer- ence Phone 2884-W, or write Tribune Box 199. By “Brow ‘d navel by} if ‘ George M‘Chitchem A\UNIVERSAL JEWEL A lesson n speed for bashful lover Cupid was too slow for him How long should a man hesi tate before popping the ques- tion? A love t gle with four cor- ners enty-four hours from introduction to wedding, Would you let a man pose as your wife's husband? High of a speed romance modern Lockinvar. “Here he comes!—There he || goes!” and it's all over but the wedding, From roses to orange blos soms in six hours, re © of the tea, dances and idl wnuseermnts of his set. More than everything else he craves adventure and the stodgy old island of Man- ttan seems utterly unable to pro- vide {t. There's but one thing left to do and he does it—goes out in ch of action, anything that «Conte and Cure” of War | Are Goals of Women in Session at Washington By ROBERT T. SMALL. (Copyright, 1925, Casper Tribune.) WASHINGTON, Jan. 21.—A very earnest band of women, feeling that romises excitement, His quest rings him to Hell's Kitchen section { the city and more thrills to the square foot than he ever dreamed were in store for him. If it’s. pell-mell action and a real he-man story with unusual heart- you're looking for, why don't yourself to look further. is—plus! Combine all the raising scenes of all the screen rillers you've ever seen, all the sh spots of the funniest comedies ever enjoyed and there you have “Manhattan.” It's Dix’s first as a star and it's a wow! Jacqueline Logan plays opposite the star in the leading woman's role. Greg Kelly, well known on the stage for his work in the arkington plays, ‘“‘Twee Clarence” and others and in ittle Jesse James,” 1s also well cast as are George Seigmann, Gun- boat Smith and a host of others just as prominent. .) “Manhattan,” Famous at the Ri SILENT WATCHER’ HOME DRAMA OF APPEAL; NEXT [3 REGGIE AT AMERICA Hawk" photop! reat thir lent Watch ure featur. one of Paramount's Forty,” opens tomorrow to theater. Since he made Frank Lloyd has ven ans feason to expect rom him, and in “The a First National ng Glenn Hunter and Bessie Love which began its showing at the America theater last night he offers he Sea they never are consulted about de- claring a war but have to stand a large share of the brunt of it, are meeting in Washington this week, trying to find “the cause and cure for war." They are a very practical lot of women and they thought the best way to find the cause of war was to invite a half score of mill tary men to address them on the subject. They figure that !f these professional soldiers do not know the cause of war, nobody does. Yet, while the soldiers know some- thing of the causes, it is admitted at the outset that the professional fighting man cares extremely little as to tht causes, Once the tocsins are sounded, his persona! ambition thrusts aside every other thought and he plunges in to make as much a success as possible out of his own particular phase of the proceedings The attitude of the fighting man is best {llustrated by the story of Major Eugene Houghton, who was machine gun officer of the first Canadian division at the outbreak of the war and then became at tached to the first American divi sion in the same capacity. Gene Houghton, an American, ‘anada when war He, loved to fight. raise a machine gun company from among some of his old companions wh campaigned in Central American revolutions. He wired two score of them, asking’ if they would join him in going to the world war. One of the replies was typical: Sure,” it read, “which side?” Feeling that there has been en Urely too much “emotionalism” in the study of wars in the p the women meeting here under the direction of Mrs. Carrie Chapman Catt are trying to go at the subject in an entire’ They pride themselves on there ts not a single “peac: represented among the nine organ! zations backing the present move nt. Evidently assify the t-and-out peac s emo- tlonalists. They are trying calmly to reach a practical foundation from which something concrete can be t public an entertainment that r well be termed great he Silent Watcher” 1s not a photoplay of unusual length, extra ordinary settings or elaborate ward robe. In fact it is its simplicity of theme and picturization whict makes it so doub! entertaining There is no padding—‘The Silent Watcher” follows Mary Roberts Rinehart’s Saturday ning Post The Altar on the Hill” faith stor ly, and in its cinema transforma on {t is improved a hundred per ent. Mrs, Rinehart's ste was terally brilliant, but when one close-ups of Joe and Mary a The Chief" on the screen, one’ ppreciation of the characters mounts much higher. “The Fast Worker” When the sapient Mr. Gilbert re marked t a polio life 1s not a happy one, he little dreamed of what unhappiness a man with a ready-made wife and family he never saw before his whole life is capable of. It remains to Regi nald Denny to demonstrate thi and he does it in “The Fast Worker, Universal's Jewel adaptation of George Barr MeCutcheon's “The Husbands of Edith,” opens at the America Friday It’s a square meal for a di-ne FAMOUR STAR OF —IN— “THE SILENT SUPPORTED BY BESSIE LOVE STORY BY Made by the Producer o —ALSO COMEDY— Shows 1, 3,5, 7, and 9 10c enting a Whirl ' “GOIN New Specialties TODAY and TOMORROW GLENN HUNTER “MERTON OF THE MOVIES” WATCHER” HOBART BOSWORTH ALMA BENNETT Mary Roberts Rinehart “THE SEA HAWK” “The Rat’s Knuckles” and News COLUMBI Lem Desmond's Famous New York Roof Garden Revue builded ' “Propaganda” is the arch foe at whom the women are aiming their \ttacks. This is because they feel the women of the country are the very first to succumb to a well \irected campaign “ef propaganda And all because of emotionalism There is no thought that the women of the country can suddenly be di vorced from one of the strongest traits in their character, from the HUSKY VILLAINS WRECK THINGS IN IRIS MOVIE ‘The hut near the top of the moun tain which {s the scene of the big fight between Pete Morrison and the two arch villains in the Sanford Production ‘West vs. East” is not a movie “set.” It js Pete Morrison's very own mountain refuge. Whenever he feels that the Holly wood life is tending to make him soft, Pete packs a burro and mounts his horse and does some real rough ing with the lonely mountain hut as his base. It cost Sanford Produc tions just exactly $9.47 to restore the damaged furniture of Pete's lofty domicile after the ravages inc! t to his encounter with the two But, in spite of there will be nc advance in vhen Pete Mor rison appears in West vs. East ut the Iris Theater Today and tomor row TODAY and THURSDAY NEAL HART —in— “WEST vs. EAST” Also Comedy “CORN FED” IRIS JAZZ ORCHESTRA EVERY NIGHT Aft., 10c and 20c Eve., 10c and 25c and 40c TONIGHT 7 and 9 ‘c’Cly of Gayety Entitled G UP” A Musical Comedy Surprise New Numbers First Run Picture MARY ALDEN in “A WOMAN’S WOMAN” days of Eve down to the present time, but in this respect again {t is felt that perhaps a start can be made. In Mfs. Catts’ thoery, there is no use to shout “No more war!” unless you can show there is a bet- ter way to settle international diffi- culties and unless you know just what has brought on the war in the Fast. The ladies are learning, first of all, that war Is an evolution, rather than a revolution. Causea of wars between nations date far back, The sudden flame of attack comes only after long smouldering of the embers of wars and war spirit grow between nations just as quar- rels grow between neighbors. It Is one thing today and another to- morrow. This, the women are being told. How they are to apply the knowledge they are to gain at this week's convention is the real prob- lem. The causes of war are simplo. The cure, the most difficult thing in the world. BREATH-TAKING GOMEDY MAKING BIG. SENSATION It just takes your breath away to see Desmond's Roof Garden Revue in “Going Up” at the Columbia the ater, for the novelty presentation of the livest bits of the famous Broad- way musical comedies {s making a tremendous hit with Columbia crowds. Holly Desmond and her company do to the perfection the parts they have taken. The singing {s super- par, the dancing is feature stuff, with costumes all sparkling and flashing with brilliant colors. Here is a show to see—one not to miss, for it affords more than one keen hour of hilarity and freedom from care. Vet of Man Wars Is Dead CHAPPELL, Neb., gust ‘Uncle Johnny’ uenin, 90, veteran of the civil, French Crimean and Sahara-Arab wars and a particl- pant in several early Indian skirm- died at his home here yester- 21.—Au- HEARTBURN Gas, belching, sour risings and such distresses that rob you of life’s chief delight —a relish for the good things of the table—are.so quickly relieved with one or two STUART'S Dyspepsia Tablets that you then tackle pie, cheese, Pickles, milk, fried eggs, bacon, onions, sausage and buckwheat cakes with the utmost unconcern. Thene tableta stomach the alka- Roretet ered agcae st: ‘stomach a. meals Unit you were afraid to even look at AT ALL DRUGGISTS away in the to February 15. | Please register. That sum will buy a good many things. if you are a Casper young woman, seventeen or older. be Casper Daily Cribune RAPID MOVEMENT OF CROPS IN™ NORTHWEST BY THE RAILROADS HELD DOWN LOSSES IN YEAR MINNEAPOLIS, Minn., Jan, 21.— (By The Arsociated Press) — The work of the northwest regional ad- visory board of the American Rail- way association, enabling northwest farmers to obtain the maximum ben. efit from thelr bumper 1924 crops by expediting movements to the mar- kets, was reviewed Tuesday at the board’s annual meeting here, attend: ed by representatives from Montana, Minnesota, and North and South Da- kota. Reports from the various commit tees indicated, according to J. F. Reed of St. Paul, chairman, that the losses due to inadequate transporta- tion facilities were held to a mini- mum during-the year, The report of the committee on finances and credits patricularly stressed the value of the improved shipping methods, stating: “If the conditions of 1919 had ex- isted, it would not have been possible to experience anything but a small part of the Hquidation that has oc curred.’ “Cars were furnished promptly at local shipping points,’ the report ly to the treminals with a resulting stready flow of money into the coun- try, The importance of adequate transpértation in bringing about the greatly improved condition cannot be over estimated.” Results of surveys reported by the different committees indicated ac- cording to board members, that re- gardless of the burdens imposed by 1925 shipping the available facilities appeared adequate. The reports for the most part, were interpreted by board officials as promises of brisk business during the year. Typical of the tone of the mes- sages brought by the vice chairman, board members say, was the state- ment of F. B. Connelly, chairman, Montana board, ‘that we believe the shippers of Montana are much bet- ter satisfied with the services they have had during the past year, as against railroad services furnished during any year since the railroads came." a One-way sidewalks are suggested In New York City as a step toward continues, “and there moved prompt: the solution of the traffic. problem. Rheumatism in wrists Relieve inflammation and pain with this quick-acting liniment If you suffer from rheumatism in the wrist joints, try Sloan’s. One light application—you don’t have to rub it in—will give you relief that is nothing short of amazing. The stimulating ingredients of ‘which Sloan's is composed send freshly purified blood tingling through the aching joints, And this enriched blood supply de- stroys the germs that are causing the pain, Swiftly the aching eases off, the inflammation and swellin; are reduced. Enjoy this comfo: today. All druggists—35 cents. ° ee kills Sloan's Liniment ‘pains Hoot What Could You Do With $150.00? And YOU have a chance to get it, RIALTO THEATER Popularity Contest and getting your friends and associates in business to vote for you as THE MOST POPULAR YOING WOMAN IN CASPER The management of the Rialto is conducting this contest, which will run up The young woman who receives the largest number of votes will get the first prize of $150.00 in cash. Whoever comes in second will get $25. The third and fourth in the final totals will be given $15 and $10. A total of $200 in cash prizes! All you need to do is enter the contest by using the coupon printed below. Then get your friends to go to the Rialto show and vote for you. entitles the purchaser to vote. THE CONTEST STARTS NEXT SUNDAY Here is the VOTING VALUE of the tickets 10c TICKET—THREE VOTES HERE IS YOUR ENTRY COUPON RIALTO THEATER POPULARITY CONTEST 1 | Who Is Casper’s Most Popular Young Woman? | ----a-~-+---~~~. Street, as an entrant in The Rialto Theater | | Contest to determine who is the most popular young woman in Casper. | (Write or print entrant's name and address plainly) EN ec eee en a PI Py pe BIG NIGHT UNDER AUSPICES OF CLAN STUART NO. 248, O. S. C. Annual Burn’s Celebration SPEECHES, SONGS AND DANCING Immortal Memory Proposed by Past Chief Thos. Mackay. EVERYBODY WELCOME Elks Hall, Friday, Jan. 23, 8:30 p.m. 40c TICKET—TEN VOTES Mion! How? By entering right Think of it! Every ticket - of Number | WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 21, 192 ‘ly increasea thelr payments, out all proportion to their actual \y. comes, solely to boost thelr croq according to Harry Herkowitz is connected with the bureau o ternal revenue here. Vanity and not a desirg to credit caused some other pers increase their income tax payments since publication of the figures, hy said. Pseudo Income Tax Payments Boost Credit NEW YORK, Jan. 21.--Since the publication of income tax payments some business men have deliberate- ——— Sn — > For results try a Classified ad If this Signature is NOT on the Box, it is NOT BROMO QUININE “There is no other BROMO QUININE” Proven Safe for more than a Querter of a Century as an effective remedy for COLDS, GRIP and INFLUENZA, and as a Preventive. Price 30 Cents. The First and Original Cold and Grip Tablet ADoLrn ZuKoR EET ALRE meesene TN WiLLa * 5 "y . up-to-the-min- : Agnes. Ayres ute, thrilha-sec- Antonio Moreno Bavad conn erat Made by the pro- ducer of ‘“Wander- er of the Waste- land.” G Garamount, Gicture Monte Banks Comedy, “Wedding Bells,” Fables THE NETTO LADIES ORCHESTRA Playing popular hit, “HONEST AND TRULY” With the Mlustrated Song Slides Words and music by Fred Rose RIALT TOMORROW-—RICHARD DIX in “MANHATTAN” “NORTH OF 36” Also 1—3 5—7 9 o’cl TODAY STARTING SATURDAY GRAND FINALS THURSDAY NIGHT AT THE ARKEON $200.00 PRIZE WALTZ CHAMPIONSHIP OF THE STATE Twenty couples have danced the preliminaries and they will compete tomorrow night for the champion- ship of the state. The couples who will dance in the finals are: FIRST SERIES Mrs. Eseray Mr. Ed Mr. Burgess v ora Miss Moore SECOND SERIES Marie Erickson Mrs. Hammond Muggsie Shoels Mr. Hawkins THIRD SERIES Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Leonard Gladys Brown Kyle Woodward FOURTH SERIES Mr. and Mrs. Larsh B. R. Smith Gladys Reams FIFTH SERIES Mr. and Mrs. Joe B. Warner D. C. Erkenbach Mabel C. Fernen SIXTH SERIES Gladys Lawrence V. J. Wilson Harry Iba Miss Berrier ~ Alex Powell Mrs. Duffy SEVENTH SERIES John Galbraith Margaret Regsby EIGHTH SERIES O. L. Woodruff . May Kerigan Mr. and Mrs, Ralph Tobin NINTH SERIES C. H. Lilly Mrs, C. L, Pederson : TENTH SERIES Mr. Borday Miss Enlay J. E. Warich Miss Hammond Mr. Schrogren Miss Purcell