Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, April 15, 1925, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

PAGE FOUR ATTRACTIONS TONIGHT. America.—“A Thief in Para- dise,” with Aileen Pringle, Amer- ica theater orchestra. Rialto.—“Locked Doors,” Betty Compson, with Netto ladies or- chestra. Iris.—“Madonna of the Streets,” with Nazimova and Milton Sills, Iris theater orchestra. America.—“A Thief in Para- Arkeon,—Dance, novelty prizes. By ROSCOE CONKLING FITCH value of their ndling of hose, but also brought N into thelr work an expert knowledge | eries of the China coast and pro- it : f how fire spreads and the course] gresses swiftly to San Francisco, jurlingame and Del Monte, Calif. alism this sequence has any-| jt is the story of a man whom Fate RIALTO HAS FIRE SCENE its kind ever shown on the] has made a failure, and who seizes stopped a mile. You can|the opportunity to masquerade as feel the heat! another man in one last effort to re “Locked Doors’ is an original| gain his self-respect. His accom: ar r reen story by Clara Beranger who] plice in the impersonation is an 1 ) credited with the scenario. | furasian girl who falls in love with A © ATHIEE IN PARADISE “| ATTHE AMERICA TODAY 15 TORNADO OF ACTION him and stops at nothing to win him. In the role of the other man, he meets and eventually marries an- other gitl. The dramatic possibilities of this situation are worked out to the ultimate Imit. The story told against almost any background would be intensely grip- ping, but Fitzmaurice, with his usual love of lavish pictorial effects, has provided a wide variety of back- grounds and novelties. There is the unusual girls’ polo game played by two teams of beauties clad in bath- ee An | ae a X ae: ee “e cal suit i the novel undersea fon lin 3 fae dance fy which marks the| med M “ tur point In the story. A thrill-| ’ 3 y I + {in away horse episode and a} hand-to-ha nt on the | a the sea which is ended by | ‘ : | eating i | | | *, hark are other tion by F 2 ‘ rd Merri es and ndid char} girl given Car is beyond th Polishing S Sag RPORLIAE ce $6. ‘MADONNA OF STREETS. NTH NMEA | years has| ccustomed to eing movie | actors and actresses in queer | tumes and queerer m dering through its boulevards; which has turned over its finest residences and buildings when movie producers needed them for certain scenes, may soon be unable to find a single scene being taken in public. Not that the movies are leaving Hollywood. But many producers | are beginning to realize that better results can be obtained if all of the picture is filmed inside the studio, even if it is necessary to build ‘a number of street scenes and build During the filming of ‘Madonna LBOW grease” can’t bring back that show- room lustre. But there is a way to make of eyaletvseiay hk h will ibe the - y sil as it run: First National picture at the Iris yous, car look as well as it S. theater on today and tomorrow, Edwin Carewe did not leave the studio for a single location. Every scene was filmed at the United Stu- dios. Even when it was necessary to take a scene showing the interior of a London mission house holding a thousand people Carewe preferred to build the set in the studio rather than use one of Hollywood's halls. In “Madonno of the Streets” Mil- ton Sills is cast as a mission worker. Nazimova, famous Russian actress, re-enters motion pictures after a two years’ absence and is featured in this picture with Mr. Sills, With Devoe Motor Car Finish, you can make the old “bus” look like new. It comes in standard automobile colors, sets smoothly—without brush marks or ridges—dries quickly with a durable, glass-like finish. Costs little. Easy to apply. When you want to know anything about paint or painting drop in and discuss your problems with us, JOHN JOURGENSEN 242-46 West Yellowstone Highway—Phone 33 CASPER, WYOMING Consult us about the’ Devoe Hone Tmprovement Plan{wh enablesiyou to paint pict ; ome: inside and out-and i Bay for it inl Monthly ayments! “SUMPING ETIQUETTE’ CALLS FOR CORRECT HEIGHT, MAKER SAYS World peace, 8, patety, Profanity, sh blood pressure and property ‘otection depend on the etiquette with which motorists bump and get | bumped. If you must bump be courteous,” says the American Chain company CARNIVAL DANCE EXTRAORDINARY THURSDAY NIGHT All the latest style novelties have been ! | in a new booklet on the Etiquette purchased for this dance. } of Bumping. ‘Etiquette requires bumpers on all car—bumpers which ' | will ward off without damage the There must be a carload in all. Such as Hats, ff! ead-on collision, the sidehook, the Horns! ‘Witatles ubatlsate, Sas Contathees | under cut, the over reach and the ! é ry onfetti—all 1 tinge , o NT Beaver ORE AR Rta ne nder crumpling body blow t | ‘The naked car ts barred. Not for the compant ip of the bumper: bus must take fenders, ita dented gas battered radiator to the | streets where two-fisted drivers | ng damages are unrestrained | the rules of bumper etiquette. * Choose your bumper carefully, In- st on bumpers correct in every | detall—hetght, length, curve and fit- | Ungs., A deep-chested front bumper vith at least five inches between Its | | | | RAWHOUSER’S DANCE ARTISTS its sed like clown for everybody Washington Hall will be dre and So dor ont and rear barg ts recommended for protection from the joy-riding gas house gang in a Sunday jam A spring bar will absorb more shock than a rigid bad, Freaky de Che Casvet Daily Tribune "TENT CAL KNOWS WOMEN'S GARB With the Women WEDNESDAY, APRIL 15, 1925 —— a clined in the same period from 40.44 per cent per 1,000 to 11.71 per cent per 1,000. In the meantime the popu lation of the city has grown from 95,000 to fornia’s inheritance tax can be im posed upon an estate before th: federal inheritance estate tax ha been deducted, the supreme cou held in a case brought by the esta of Henrietta Pierce Watkinson, | occas: NAF E SEES IT, PAYS; HELPS HER PICK “EM QUT President Is Great Help on Shopping Trips And Has Much Patience in Selecting Goods Wanted, BY ROBERT T. SMALL (Copyright 1925, The Casper Tribune) YASHINGTON, April 15.—Despite the fact that the White House sol- emnly Jet it be known that neither the president nor Mrs. Coolidge purchased any Easter clothes as such, the president has done more “window shopping” this spring than most any person in Washington. This window gazing will bear frult in later spring purchases, President Coolidge’s interest inj both men's and women’s attire re- vealed publicly for the first time in his speech to the National Cotton Manufacturers, may have surprised the country in general but to New Englanders {t was no news. His old as: tes in Northampton and | ve known for some matters but also that he d by Mrs. Coc expert in that line. In the days before he came to | Washington, Mr, Coolidge always ac- companied his wife on her shopping trips in Boston. The Coolidge fam- y maintained their home tn North: | pton during the time Mr. Coolidge was governor of Massachusetts and Mrs. Coolidge went into Boston only nally, when her presence was necessary at official func: deemed tions. Many times when Mr. Coolidge was out for a walk in the shopping rict of the Hub and his eyes 2 catch a hat or dress or a that appealed to him d the price, the style and and lost no time com: muni his discovery to his wife. When next she visited the state house the governor would join | her on the bargain hunting expedi- | tions. Mrs, Coolidge always matn- | tained that her husband had good | udgment and excellent taste when it came to women’s clothing and | seldom bought a drees, a coat or a a without the “advice and con sent" of her husband. “He has so much patience in such matters—infinitely more than I have,” the first lady of the land once told some of her women friends. “I always liked to have him with me when I was shopping. Often times when I would be ready to quit and take a garment or a hat, he would insist upon looking further and would encourage me to hold oft until I found just what I wanted.” Of course it is impossible now- adays for the president to accom- pany Mrs. Coolidge on her shopping tours in the capital, but he still takes almost daily walks through the shop- ping district’and when he gets back to the White House tells his wife all he has seen in the windows. Even in the days before Mr. Cool- {dge came into national prominence, Mrs. Coolidge was known as one one of the best dressed women in Massachusetts. Many women with rich husbands spent far more than she did, but few were more appro- priately attired on public occasions, due largely to Mr, Coolidge’s good taste in such matters. And as for the president—at Am- herst, he was considered one of the best dressed men in college. There is plenty of proof of this. Pictures taken at that time show him as a shoes protect. A curved end on the bumper bar to deflect blows is also approv- ed. That the bumper should be just long enough to protect fenders and not to hinder close work at the curb- stone and in traffic, is another {m- portant rule of bumping etiquette. ake Ealey Candy Bar Of Today For the second time in the his- tory of the United States, diplomatic corps a woman has passed the gov- ernment examinations. The first woman to pass the test was Miss Lucille Atcherson of Ohio, who is now on duty in the state department at Washington. The latest aspirant to diplomatic honors is Mirs Patty Field, a charming Colorado girl. She was one of 20 to pass the examina- tions out of a class of 120 persons. Although as far as is known no American woman has received ap- pointment as minister or secretary to a foreign embassy, Miss Ann Hil- lery of Milwaukee, Wis., is chief clerk of the American embassy in Buenos Aires. She is believed to be nS. COOLINGE Wife Declares. veritable beau brummel of his class. He even carried a walking stick, most of the photographs disclosing |the only woman who holds such a a natty Uttle cane in his hand. position in the service. President Harding always carried em a cane on his walking tours about Washington. Mr. Coolidge nowa- days swings his hands The country need not worry about the Coolidge. wardrobe. It will be found propriate for all occasions. MURDERESS WILL LIVE English women may not vote, ac- cording to law, until they are 30 years old, but they may run for office as members of the London County Council, the legislative body that makes the laws for the metrop olis of London. Miss Thelma Cazalet, 26 years old, was elected to the coun: cil recently. English women electors would far outnumber the men if they could vote when they are 21, The tiny shop which was th J original of the “little dark shop" that Sir John Tenniel drew for Lewis Carroll's classic, “Through the Looking Glass,” is stil! in exist- ence in Oxford, England. It was this little shop in which Alice “looked #11 around” in splte of the cross old sheep with the knitting needles. will o} teste com imp: cS rmed the” ment authorities and they have ap pealed to the physicians on the fac- | ulty of the Royal University of Oslo #.| to decide what can be dor v | » Mrs. M Hor death up. em, According held by the stat p the birth ra n efforts to secure executive clemency | si 1900 from 32 per cent per 1.000 had been under way for severa!| of population to 24 per cent per 1,000, months. | while in the city of Oslo it has de- If this Signature 6. Lbrove is NOT on the Box, it is NOT BROMO QUININE “There is no other BROMO QUININE” Proven Safe for more than a Quarter 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 | AUCTION SALE KLINE’S JEWELRY STORE Continuing Daily at 2:30 and 7:30 P. M. 120 EAST SECOND STREET Arkeon Dancing Academy EVERY “KIDDIE” ATTENDING THE MORNING SHOW NEXT SATURDAY WILL RECEIVE A TICKET GOOD FOR 5c TO SEE JACKIE COOGAN in “THE BOY OF FLANDERS” SPECIAL MORN RIALTO my! signs attract attention but they don't IN THE AFTERNOON G SHOW—“The Hoosier Schcolmaster” “THE SANTA FE TRAIL” Inheritance Tax of The State First ‘Bunions ‘Quick, safe, sure relief. Prevent shoe je. preseurs, DrScholls =e Zino-pads ™"** TODAY—TOMORROW—FRIDAY For her husband’s friend LOVE— For her husbancy “LOCKED DOORS’ —INe= WILLIAM DE MILLE’S thrilling triangle drama with BEAUTIFUL BETTY COMPSON as the wife—and—the flirt THE RETURN OF the screen's grand old man THEODORE ROBERTS Kathlyn Williams Theodore Von Eltz Robert Edeson ALSO MACK SENNETT COMEDY—SCENIC THE NETTO LADIES ORCHESTRA Playing “SELECTION FROM THE FORTUNE :TELLER” by Victor Herbert Popular Song “DRE AMS” by Lamont and Van Alstyne Shows s clock —3—5—7—9 o'c TODAY AND THURSDAY “A THIEF IN PARADISE” A STOLEN KISS IS NE’ER FORGOT! Ladies, you must meet this man! he’s the famous love thief—all women love _him because of his magic charm—but beware, he’ll steal your heart if you don’t watch out. —with— DORIS KENYON RONALD COLMAN Today and Thursday NAZIMOVA —And— MILTON SILLS “MADONNA OF THE | STREETS” | Also Comedy “PARIS LIGHTS” AILEEN PRINGLE Afternoons —also— 10c and 20c Comedy—News—Topics Evenings Shows at 1-3-5-7 and 9 10c and 40c 10c and 25c A BISHOP-UASS THEA (FR Friday, Saturday, Sunday, Monday SPECIAL ATTRACTION THE COLUMBIA TRIO THE RADIO FAVORITES Appearing Three Times Daily at 3:30, 7:30 and 9:30 Three Fine Male Voices in Solo, Numbers That Will Bo oct Duet and Trio Singing eat to Music Lovers

Other pages from this issue: