Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, September 12, 1925, Page 4

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is : mel PAGE FOUR a ee MAMMOTH SPECTACLE IN TEN COMMANDMENTS: NOWAT RIALTO come to us ady: @ not- which Casper, this picture deserves adjectives. It is great, , colorful and moving. It epectacle and drama. A t, a fine story, and In- on What else could kes a little over It divided ancient and modern, @ opens on the elty hey are the Pharaoh, until Moses He asks for when it is not es are visited upon e last of the plagues, Rameses rs the Het to les They with 8s and glad hearts ov t sands, This t of the picture is done in nat- 1 colors and-in its sweep is oyer- ne showing Moses andments on the the children of Israel wor- m calf in a wild CLEVER COMEDY WITK LLOVO HAMILTON IN LEAD AT THE AMERICA Lloyd Hamilton will be seen in his latest two-reel Educational-Ham- ilton comedy, “Crushed,” at the America theater today, supported by A including 3 his new leading lady, Blanche Pay- son, Tommy Hicks and others. “Crushed” is claimed to be the unniest comedy Hamilton has ever ade. A set duplicating in every detail one of New York's subway stations, was erected and much of t cor y action takes place in is location. All the realism of the famous rush hours was injected into the scenes. Several other clever episodes are worked into the emedy “CAPTAIN JANUARY? AT IRIS WITH BABY PEEGY; ~_ HERS IN COMEDY FILM the littl wn all ver the wrld be- cause of her remarkable ability as an will be t the Iris today, in “Captain January,” a screen adaptation of the famous American classic by Laura E, Rich, Waiter Hiers, who will star in another feature today fat men who h never life been called “Fat ’ Ever e he has been in pictures, it's an odd thing that he has never been dubbed the co! cast scre seen ig one of the in his w fellow er in grammar school down n Savannah, he never got the name because there was a boy | de that was fatter than he} — was. Likewlse when he went Away | ON, Sept 11.—(AP)—| hool at Peeksiill Military acad-} of the complaint | was another youth whose ed Walt ‘There allowed to get by with kname, of “Walt.” e seen in e Iris theate TIFFANY PRODUCTIONS Presents A GREAT RACING DRAMA “THE SPORTING CHANCE” By JACK BOYLE Directed By OSCAR APFEL With a Cast Including LOU TELLEGEN DOROTHY PHILLIPS GEORGE FAWCETT THEO VON ELTZ A TIFFANY GEM AMERICA TARTING TODAY Also. LLOYD HAMILTON -In , CRU SHED” 1Ne and muse ments | and finally the fade-out in ich M wrathfully at seeing | his pec treachery, flings the tab: | lets w ad received on the| the rocks, them into a] thousand parts. | he modern story was written by | Jeanie Macpherson, It shows that the commandments are us great a moral force today as they were five thousand years ago. The lives of two brothers followed. One lives a life in which he creates and breaks his own laws, while the other keeps the decalog is guiding force the end evil is punished and g s triumpha cast of five thousand people {ts | headed Rod LaRocque. Richard | Dix, Leatrice Joy, Agnes Ayres, Nita | Naldi, ‘Theodore Robe: Estelle Taylor, James Neill, he Chap. man, Robert Edeson and Charles de | Roc Don't miss this picture he, Ten Commandments those photoplays which world should sce se FINE DANCE AT NORTH WASHINGTON HALL SET FOR PATRONS TONIGHT Bohn’s orchestra wil! provide its | usual peppy musio for the crowd | which is sure to flock to the North Washington dance hall this evening. | Saturday night always is the big night at North Washington hall, and the dance tonight is expected to! uphold the standard of previous oc- | casfons. A flat admission price is charged, et gene MANY NOVELTIES WILL BE OFFERED AT ARKEON DURING COMING WEEK | is one of | the whole | | | N the week will be warded eu y novelties will be offered at eon dancing academy next A $1,000 display of novelties made and prizes will be uch night. 1al Saturday night dancing ail this evening, with a rec- A T will pr | ord crowd expected. The silk st night and merry to see see stocking dancing heid drew a full attendance dancers who were eager if thelr numbers would Win a pair of the Holeproof hosiery which were given away. Twen pair were awarded to the followin, Bessie Tate, Miss Siebers, Mrs. Hill, Emile DeMorest, Margarite Alla- mand, Mrs. R. Britt, Gertrude Sisk, Miss Doyle, M Crowe and Miss Welcher. The gentlemen to win the silk hose were P. McCloud, Ernie Ross, R, A. Dall, P. IK. Davis, D. Smith, Al Seanor, W. R. Shelton. B Morton, E. D. Yodel and Lee Whi ney Armour-Morris | Merger Charge | To Be Dropped ed Armour-Morri rests is u n decided upon | v | >vernme ecision which s Jaré on is to be} was dls-| ecretary TODAY ONLY Bp \} TRYBODYS, CHILD HOBART BOMWORTH NE RICE vf —Also— WA LTER HIER RARIN’ ROMEO” 10¢ “A and 20¢ OF ALLTHINGS BO YOU CALL THis -? z ao OUT OUR WAY... e Casper Daily cribune | WY POOR BUNKEY {| GOT A AWFUL Soci \ INTH EYE MA, AN’. | HIS OU MAN -I-T MEAN HIS PA'LL® KNoci< TH STUFFIN OUTA IM \F HE COMES HOME WH A BLACK EYE. \NE. AIN'GOT NO BEEF STEAK SO IM Jus PUTTNA \ PORK CHOP ON IT / THE Sunpay , TRMiLbLans, 4-7 Wife of Well | Known Lawyer | Dies Abroad The Associated Press)—Mra. 5 Severance, widow of Cordenio A. Severance, internationally known lawyer, died today at Nauheim, Ger- many, a cable message received here sald. Mrs. Severance who was prom!- nent in social, political and civic, ac- tivities In St. Paul, and the north west, had been in ill health for sey- eral years, and since the death of her husband May 6, last her condi. tion has been e. She was 62 broad June fl, Insane Asylum Is Menaced By Morning Fire (By The Associated Press)— of undetermined origin starting in a hay and grain barn at the Connecti- cut hospital for the insane here this afternoon, threatened the main build- ing of the institution. Several of the outbuildings were destroyed. Pre- parations were made to remove the patients from the hospital if the flames approached the buNding. Children’s Pictorial " Cross Word Puzzle ~. Central Press Photos Miss Sarah Henry of Miami, Fla., is a modern Venus. Her! measurements match exactly those of the famous statuc. ; The two. are shown together, . have inticipated | nad € a which she ld not avoid.’ If on ships pre was the cause of the disaster which | viously fighting their way through overtook the dirigible Shenando: adverse conditions anybe would Captain Anton Heinen, man dir! ave dared tamper with this gible expert, in o telegr to Secre-| main safety device, the way it was tary of the Navy Wilbur, made pub-| done here, the history of airships lic toda challenged the “possibility | certainly would haye been that of of any truthfully convincing testi-}even more appalling disasters, and I. Running Across. mony that the gas bags were intact] for one, would not be here to tell Word 1, What animal in the | when the ship broke up.'* the story.’ | old fable called the grapes sour | Captain Helnen’s telegram was an| Captain Heinen asked Secretary | when he couldn't reach them? Word 3. Usedinaball game. | ° Word 5. ‘Till, | Word 7. Finish. i? Word 8 What Noah’s boat was | “¢ called, w Running Down. Word 1, What one who likes baseball or any sport is called. Also an article used in warm weather, Word 2, A water animal. | Word 8, An insect. | Word 4. Opposite of new. | je Word 6. We use it in writing. | w YESTERDAY'S PUZZLE | Se ANSWERED, a ak an it DIRIGIBLE EXPERT STICKS TO CLAIM THAT VALVE REDUCTION WAS CAUSE OF AIR DISASTER would not even to a statement issued by the| Wilbur not to follow ‘the easy road of the navy in which he| of least resistance and to maneuver uid it was manifest that the acci-|the poor, mistreated Shenandoah nt to thp Shenandoah was in no| into the role of the accused, but to ise due to the change th the es-| See that all of us who are entrusted ue “valve he gas bars did| With responsibilities stand squarely explode, and that. the She up to face them if the necessity struck a small unexpected t arises.” 5 at * line squall which she could ‘oid | ‘Taking exception to the secretary's The timber of an oak is not really much good until the tree is about a century old, <planation of the cause of the ¢ Captain Heinen said: “Mr . : cretary, the explanation which 1 CHICHES E S P ts gave ye nd upheld, and which i platron® saa er 0) y € v0! ear of conse ‘g les! As re ther ly or from f ¢ con rN fodicel (ok zeae Brecates 1ences, secretly, is backed up by COR Heed Pills in Red and erybody knowing _ sufficiently | 5 >< aie nib} a) out airships in the air, is simpler rae] dake Be nd easier to see than you will have Zé wi Roth pis MOND Due to th inexcusably handi- SOLD BY DRUGCISTS EVERYWRELE pped condition In which the VAUDEVILLE ACTS GALORE With Stewart Ferguson’s DAKOTA KINGS SUNDAY NIGHT—ALL NEXT WEEK AT RIVERVIEW PARK hen | Season Is | By ROBERT T. SMALL (Copyriht, 1925, Casper Tribune) NEW YORK, Sept.-11.—New York s enjoying, or rather is in the midst f its nakedest theatrical season. | Weminine beauty unadorned ts bi ing ‘glorified’ at a dozen theaters and nobody seems to mind. A year ago there was a great clatter among the stage reformers and managers | were hastening to dress their “art- ists’ mode but this year the brakes have been taken off, to say notiing of the cloth Perhaps it is because the city is torn and wracked by its most per- fervid political campaign in half a century that no one 1s paying par- ticular attention to what 1s going on or what is being taken off at the theaters. Perhaps New Yorkers themselves are not going to the “re- vues” any more and are leaving the “morals” of the stage to the big butter and egg men, or the big grain and feed men who come to the city at this time of year from all sections of the country. tired business man, whether he be in butter and egs or grain and feed or cloaks and suits, is assured of having his fling at the managerial idea of the antidote for commercial fatigue, Evidently the “play jury” which was to censor the stage has been on 2 vacation and with the jury away | the producers will play. There has been the suggestion that the cost of revue productions had reached the point whefe the managers simply had to call a halt, Costumes were becoming entirely too elaborate and expensive. What could be simpler, therefore, than to dispense with cos- tume entirely on a large part of the cast and chorus? This was the managers’ way of reckoning and ap- parently they have not reckoned hout their hosts, for the theaters are crowded by night and by day. rhe percentage of masculine attend- ance, however, is far in excess of the feminine, the gentler sex as a whole, not caring especially for the man- ner in which their sisters are being glorified. A year ago there was the flitting of a nude figure across the dimly lighted stage. ‘oday the spot and colored lights are turned loose with all their glory upon the Eves and Venuses and Aphrodites that dot and languish in the productions of the séason. In some of the revues efforts aro made to improve or em- phasize the handiwork. of nature. Altogether, it is the boldest season the managers’ ever haye attempted, and they are getting away with it to what they call “big money.” It costs the wayfarer anywhere from $4.40 to $6.60 at box office prices to visit the institutions of art along old Broadway. <A year ago they were arresting managers for dis: playing photographs of what might or might not be seen on the stage. This year the town would laugh im- moderately at such a move. The more serious phase of the | new theatrical season is about here, | | however, and it may be that the Eve and Venus and the “Girl of To- morrow” shows will slow down or disappear as the “drammer” comes to take its place in the fancy of the Appropriation Of Road Funds Is Speeded Up WASHINGTON, Sept. 12.—(By The Associated Press)—The U. S. bureau of public roads today decided to ap- portion road funds authorized for the fiscal year 1927 on December 1, a mont® ahead of the usual time. oe alee Tell the Advertiser—"I saw it in The Tribune." “Nakedest” Theatrical N. Y. Stir of Last Year In any event, the | Sequel To | public. The revue producers are by no means convinced of this, never- theless, and are planning new start- lers for later in the autumn and winter. Just how much father they can go without running afoul of an ftroused public sentiment remains literally to be seen. Meantime, the butter and eggs men who take an artistic interest in the glorification of the American girl had better hurry to New York. The present state of things can not go on forever. Some bright evening there will come a crash and a rapid covering up. Then, in the usual or- der of things, there will be a period of quiet and the first thing you know the ld will be lifted once more and a new period of glorification will appear. ne ee BAPTIST AUTO CHAPEL T0 BE DEDICATED I pASPERS P.M, SUNDAY The Baptist Auto Chapel car which was received by Rev.| Joe P. Jacobs, superintendent of Missions for the Wyoming Baptist. Conven- tion, will be dedicated at the Metho- dist Church lot, corner of Blghth and Center streets at 3 o'clock Sun- day afternoon, Rey. and Mrs. Shep: herd from New York are the Eyan- Gelists in charge of this car and will be present at the dedication, T: public generally are invited to at- tend these vices, This car {s sent out by the Ameri- can Baptist Publication Society and the American Baptist Home Mission Society for Evangelistic work in Wyoming. It takes the place of Chapel Car “Byangel"” which has been used on the railroad for thirty- five years and is now at Rawlins serving as a permanent church building. Mr. ‘obs will tell the history of Chapel Cars and Chapel Autos The for at the time of the dedication. car will be open for inspection all who attend the se SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1925 —_——————————— AUTO THIEF fo IDENTIFIED fa PRISON DODGER” Man Held At Cheyenne | Found to Be Escaped Jersey Convict. Wyo., Sapt. . who was brought here with a man named Carroll, who ha confessed to aiding in the theft of the recently, A. Fox, entified as Era property < been positivel. M. Thorne, a convict who escaped with .a companion. from the New Jersey state penitentlary on June ursday b: other alleg- ed thief, Carroll, | y Jack Ri ley, the companion of Stafford, oF Thorne, who escaped with the latter from the New Jer: bu his identification has not made. Following the identification Stafford, the men have expte desire to plead guilty county district court arraigned Friday. Previously, the men refused to plepd ilty. aft having stated that they would. They later confossed to having sto- io Nebraska and one in prison, yet and they were len two. cars I:nois. See Scientific massage for ladies and gentlemen Zaths in connection Ladies 2 to 5 p, m. Gentlemen 19 a, m. to 1 p.\m, and 7 to 12 p,m For appointment phone 1478. pectin lard sls Tell the Advert The Tribune, PERMANENT WAVE ENTIRE HEAD $20.00 BETTY’S BEAUTY PARLOR er—"“Saw It in Tribune Bldg. Phone 707. Everybody will attend the on MOON | | SHOWS MAT, 2:30 THE YEAR’S REATEST PICTURE “THE TEN COMMANDMENTS” CECIL B. DE MILLE’S GREATEST ACHIEVEMENT THE NETTO LADIES ORCHESTRA Playing the Original Music Score STARTS A WEEK’S.RUN TODAY AT “RIALTO ADMISSION MATINEE—ADULTS 50¢, CHILDREN 25¢ EVENINGS—LOWER FLOOR Evening Prices for Children and Adults Special Matinee for School Children Every Afternoon 4:30, 15¢ SATURDAY NIGHT DANCING THE ONE BIG NIGHT OF THE WEEK with those present. COUPONS FREE SAVE YOUR COUPONS—GET ALL YOU CAN ARKEON NEXT WEEK—ALL WEEK GIGANTIC NOVELTY WEEK PRIZES EACH NIGHT—$1,000.00 DISPLAY 75¢c, BALCONY 50c Arkeon tonight. Be happy the TOURING CAR ROADSTER EVE. 7:00, 9:00

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