Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, May 3, 1925, Page 19

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} men DAY, MAY 3, 1925 0K TURPIN AIGH IN OLD ENGLISH ROMANCE erns of Medieval Period Are Shown ji mn 18 when Gec known from 1630 to 189 wild young no- | AT AMERICA 15 New Tom Mix Screen Hit’ Now Drawing Crowds Hete. clad English highwaym early Elghteenth century I depart r Tom Mi pin'’s amazing feats ‘of ship, picturesque perforr cheerful methods of rasca fted in horsemanship to an e higher’ degree than was the Dick ‘himself, To: h to the wor tone that pin a cl Mec inject the needed vill: at the out d possible, | “Little Annie. Roone ‘om K. a the fam “he le. Kathleen beau ng woman, re: s fame ‘by the leading fer role and James Mar. y in do manner that both atred of Mix ‘picture fans arid Bull Montana and sowling Sid Jordon are better than best friends would have be- a@ producer hotodramas. second great audiences at-the an expose of th {tuted authorities. enthralling te background of 1 rich costumes, | gh indulgence all but ruinssher role from the ROKEN LAWS’ IN OPENING AT IALTO THEATER STANDS OUT AS BIG TRIUMPH FOR MRS. REID In her support were such capable players as Percy Marmont, the pat- fent husband of the “jazz Jacqueline Saunders who y Wallacé thur Rankin and Virginia Lee Cor bin as the young p these pla’ of'the photodrama Judging from the effect upon the first nighters, “Broken Law go- ing its local run. It has all the ele- ments necessary for a successful en drania, and fs flawless production throtghout It-is @ credit to the producer, who is attempting to provide worth-while screen plays that mean something and that entertain at the same time No one should miss seeing ‘Broken Laws.” It is a play for the whol family, and one: the whole family | needs Sure am g0- ‘ox western star, the big Fox FILM ADAPTED FROM PRIZE NOVEL COMING of Innocence” interesting Comedy and Thrills In Buck Jones Film at Iris fornia, where exterior scene and stunts had n taken’ forhis latest western thriller, Th omeo,” playing at the trie today “I have had my share of close calls since I entered this business of making “movies,” Buck continu ed, “but I had one in Victorville this last time that will’ s me for many day’. We were shoot ing a stunt in which my horse mile an hour rate.” girl I have to-réscue is aboard the train and Tar to da&h alongside the train take the’ girl mount the coach with the girl on my arm “Well, the’ sceno started and sil stepped right out ‘and I. nege ted the first part’ of the stint p-shape fashion, From then ¢ » breaks were ag me. M jumper I slipped wh and then ‘aga when ne alr for hack € countered nothing, but thin air; the | horse .having sbi@l away trom the fast’ moving train ‘because of a dit ground. Here I was holding one arm with Luey , lend lady, hanging on to me for ¢ and both of us shooting thro: space at what seemed to me almost 100 miles an hour. F Whnt “Ads. Pid a onde S Tribune Classified Public Steographer, Lega] Work Mimeographing Multigraphir The Letter Shoppe Hotel Townsend, Phone 250( TAtiernonis 10c and 2 Ev sing’ 10¢ and tee A Bishop-Cass Theater BUCK JONES —{Nos “AN ARIZONA ROMEO and YVAN BIBBER COMEDY “THE HUNT” ee ins 8 O ae id really remarkable work in that role; Ram- 8 Joan's husband, Ar- ople, and Pat Moore and Jane Wray as the chil drem. “There was not a weak spot in the entire cast, and the work of rs had niuch to do with a practically Arizona | With | husbands be nesday and Thursday. It Is a Robert Z. Leonard production for Metro- C ture mada hy that director in several years in which his wife, Mae Mur: ray, has not appeared. sil- yer Buck, figured prominently. and ising as @ prop a train traveling at “Right here I want to tell that miles per hour ia much faster than I ever before imagined. The Silver’ from the platform of This extremely belligerent young person {8 “Little Annie Roonle,” fas Mary Pickford. She is- all reac, to fight the rival gang in her current picture, in which-she’ plays a ragged’kid and, later, a saucy little dime store clerk. Mary celebrated het birthday re- cently with a strenuous day of work on the lot, but a year more or less added to her age ireans nothing in her young li 0k at hert Be- side her, Pete 1 in a patriarch, you remember, insisted g0 to school» be: ve to grow up « ss man. Maybe i ase Women are braver than men, but Mary went to school and. into business, too, id might usiness. But she has not grown np, not in looks, how—which ts what counts most with a woman, Mary: is to do another “ragged” | shed “Annie| hen she has f alias Mary Pickford STAR DUST. For the fir jloria Swanson’ and her first’ aus: b.nd, Wallace Beery, are working © the same lot, at the Paramount Studio in Hollywood, .* * Tommy |} i to have bought | Meighan 13 repor $250,000 worth of business property 1 Ocala county, Florida. Florida rival California in picture pro: duction some day, say. those in the know. * * Elmer Clifton has been | signed by Inspiration Pictures to | direct Richard Dicky, is workir oe Irene” is to follow “Sally” into th movies.’ Colleen’ Moc the film ally, will star In an. elaborate ve sion of “Irene,” one of the outsta ing musical comedy hits of recent years. * * Jack Mulhall will play opposite ne Griffith in or next, & ion of Edna Fer- ber which follows Th Stewart is vacating her home in New York to become a permanent resident of Hollywood. * * “The! Fortune Hunter,” the stage play | ught fame to John} that first 3 Warner and Barrymore in rich von Stroheim has broken oft with Metro-Goldwyn after direct ing « cture, “The Merry WI! dow nelm couldn't get along with iversal, .elther. He un a great director, but he as too. much temperament to sutt ers He may direct abroad after this he has offers from ‘0 City and Rome Vienna, » FINE DRAMATo ~- FEATURED IN COMING FILM “Cheaper to Marry” to Open Wednesday at The Rialto. paper to Mari * a screen ver amuel Shipman's drama of 1 demi-busbands, will the Rialto theater next Wed- dwyn-Mayer, and is the first pic- The cast is headed by Lewis 8 | Stone, who has shown to such good advantuge In “Scaramouche,” “The soner..of Zenda,” ,‘‘Why .Men Leaye Hom: “Husbands and Loy * and “Inez From Hollywood," Duyal, a new face—and » the Ziegfeld nllies,”” ling feminine that Broadway Butterfly g like 750 regula or ganized women’s clubs exist in Ne and | MONDAY | successful | time in many years | “Little Annie Rooney,” alias Mar» AVI. * + Anita | Monday—Tom Wednesday, nd other well known players. -ultzer prize win- Also comedy * Pathe News and Top- Riding Hood’ y and Saturday—Milton Sills "in the supporting cast, Gets In Dutch, the Spat Family, a comady starring and Fox Ne Iris Theater y Only—Buck Jones in “An and comedy Monday, and Tuesday—Jack Hoxte “The Sign of “A Monkey Wednesday inne Griffith in and comedy the Cactus," Thursday—Cor. “Love's Wilderness: ‘A A PUR Sea Pantie,” Tuesday— Wednesday, —Lewis Stone, Saturday— Sinctin ng of another TWO MORE RAILROADS ADOPT USE OF TRUCK use of motor AND “TONY” THE WONDER HORSE “DICK TURPIN” A tlirilling tale of the world’s most noted bandit, with the usual Mix action and humor, The same Tom Mix in.a-new style role. KATHLEEN MYERS, PHILO McCULLOUGH, ALAN HALE and ‘ BULL” MON.- TANA in the Supporting Cast. Comedy—"DANGEROUS CURVES and FOX NEWS + @be Casper Sunday Cridune THE PEOTILENCE OF FANATICISM SENATOR REED 'D WRITES: ARTI (Continued from Page - Six) while the great tide of traffic pro- ceeds. Now comes the most inhuman product of prohibition, the Poison Squad, Its business {s to poison the alcohol turned over to the industries under the name s{ b prohibition unit’ kno lon out of every ten c concoction ig diverted from and drunk by the people. The ist of the bureau of internal enue recently testified’ that accor¢ ing to best estimate in the ye 1924, 6,000,000 gallons of dénat alcohol were used as a bever Asserted that many of the substa used in deaturin sons,’ that th t concoction can be soc Geceive the unsyspecting vi drinks it, He admitted tha r times the denatured product is sold without an attempt to remove it fatal properties. In any event, small portions of the poison rema’ are gravely injurious to the The prohibition unit knows it killed or injured: thousands of sons. It persists in and seemingly enjoys the infamous practice. Once the distiller turned whiskey. Against its use the clar gus tongue of protest was r it was outlawed. The distiller makes pure alcohol. The prc units transforms 60,000,000 of it into coffin varnish each year knowing that “6,000,000 gallons reach the stomachs of human bel That extinct animal, the pect able saloonkeéper,” was denounced for selling rot-gut, but not Wheeler ever accused him of di erately and maliciously putting his whiskey barrels such death ing toxins as strychnine, wood : hol, formaldehyde, carbolic acid c mercury, all of which are employed by the prohibition unit. The v of saloon whiskey could be swilled by habitue for years. The Polson Squad compounds a potion which, kills its unsuspecting victim within a few moments. One could dirnk gal lons of the old stuff and survive. A single dose of Dr. Wheeler's Chem {cal Compound has produced blind ness and death in fifteen minu Ths cid stuff acted slowly and henc its user had time and opportunity to reform. Dr. Wheeler Kills quick, When the old-fashionéd dru at the end of years of hilarit 1 him, down to a peaceful death or ar made a jovial exit astride a purple dipsosaurus or some other aniins of the alcoholic menagerie, the Anti Saloon League gathered around h: coffin and wept for a good man gone wrong. Today when an upright cit zen gets q dose of Wheeler's Ready Rellef and is sent to the eternal bar of Judgement without time for re pentence or benefit of clergy, the same crowd chuckie and declare. ‘It Served him right. He broke our law. But be it remembered that each time the old-fashioned drunkard accumu lated a jag he also. broke. the law Nevertheless, for him there w "sorrows, plenteous tears,” while for the victim stricken blind or writhing in the, convulsions of poison unwit tingly taken, there are only ribald and contemptuous jeers. Similarly proceeded the Suffrage Crusader, To her;.the man-goyerne world was @ seething cesspool of in iquity which would be purified by a touch of her angelic hi The “purification early became manifest, Suffragettes thronged th capitol, boldly offering to swap wo men's yotes for congressmen at th impending election for congres “votes for women” on the pendlr bill. All who refused to agree thréatened with éxtermination In yain they might protest that the amendment stripped the stat a yery high attribute of sovereignt or that to fofce a state to grant, v quite ‘aw unjustifiable as to cor a state to refuse, the suffrage. The effect. of argument ate feminine acrimor n those oO assured mn. He sey especially to vote for suffrag that state. He gave out powe interviews urging all states to pr ceed similarly, but ho ventured ¢ protest mil against forcing suf age upon the state by an amend ment to the federal constitutior This cordial’ and just attitude seem ed only to arouse additional venor Shows at 1,3,5,7 and 9 10c and 40c ~ oat Tie, bearing aloft tn pickets and’ declared’ a state of per detachment sh ret’ and at the nehman’s mon mesrage was tulated for votes | were to b gaged in heated disput and | PAGE SEVEN CINEMA ATTRACTIONS TOENTERTAIN THE PUBLIC cuing the bables from “their 1 ural mothers?” He the clamorous tongues of the ad cates of the Bat Control b astounded to’ learn that nearly mothers were ignorant, incompeter or vicious, and that bables were gen erly grossly mistreated and allowed to die of hardship and neglect. In wonderment he asked how a race so crue ered, could have not only survived but advanced fr barbarism to a high state of ¢ zation who listene W The remedy proposed by the t savers was, of course, statutory Washington bureau was created to regulate and reform the mot of the land. The humor of the proj entuated by the fact that of the bureau, almout ception, were spinsters he period of hope, and’ there devoid of experi in either the pangs or passions motherhood. The uplifters he job. “Amor a thor ugh going ov ] nether she rea. new how ide wh a baby. Midwiv lected. Rules for the a led to the imports » to h Shorn of its more monstrous terms la-| have babies in m | way. Children » in-| Mothers still coy state | smudg they | the Ii t to the suffragette cru: e of a sovereign s nt was’ passed. you will be un auroral dawn of the millennium dresses are a little shorter, ittle flappler, the | cigarette vendor fortuitous conditions enjoys a boom. of great violence verts to the brothers | ple would be turned into th rutal enslavement. contemplates serene certainty nature's law and go down sharing each ; that bonds of affection and interest will remain master in external con women will c: ine mistress of t the mother and sed by brutal the law was en velous to report cted, But—oh, mar. —women conti he same mud ples, and thrive troglodyt r with kis noes of their offspring, tuc le forms In at night, and like the mothers of all time, guard fram evil with eand d less love—a love that can neve supplanted by a government whether a superannuated spins town constable, But what of ciety of Spinsters? It still exis 1 government bounty, and tells the world how to raise babies! This by no means concludes the | gamut of current reform schemes, some of them half socialistic, som half bolshevistic, sorne half idiot r half in each case t A compound of maud timentality nd a natural desir t nose into the business of ¢ rs. The city of Washingt affords recent and ludicrous illustration Good-hearted busybodies, thems: ving in sumptuous homes, conclud ed that all “‘alley-houses” must be torn down. An all house is so ¢ od muse it fronts on an alley The plumbing not moder bath tubs are in dence. Accordingly that the alley-houses m with demolished. After t rder had gone forth it was di ed. that more than nine thousand poor pe st hout roof or wall to protect th ‘om the elements! The law had to be disregarded. Whereat the reform: ers gathered the skrity-of their right eousness about them, gave their feathers a scornful shake, picked up their gables, and packed themselves Joff to thelr customary afternoon teas, bridge parties or ciga fabs. Thereupon the poor darkey moved back into his and thanked Ged he had beer from the reformers. Truth to tell, Washington 1¢ the universal Mecca of hurr freak > that city protag vagaries gravitate by known routes, some by election, some by ar ntment, and some by “divine com nd.” The great m: ity, howey When you see this picture you will not only mary magic performance of Mrs who ex 1, but you will fee o her for her courage {n presenting this most vital problem o Also, Mack Sennett Comedy a B Yow'll thrill to your finger lips at it tense drama! You'll sit entranced at the remark- able acting f the Jazz News Weekly It is respectfully siiggested to those who contemplate seeing this magniticent produc ton to time their visits as carly in the day ag possible, in order to avold. the crowds at the evening performances, TODAY TOMORROW TUESDAY

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