Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, September 24, 1925, Page 10

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. : £ PAt p rm PAGE TEN — RECESS TAKEN AT WAonlN IN AIR PROBE Hearings of - Coolidge Board Will R Next Monday. ept } y of the WASHING’ e Associ: 1 is: divergence Jepartment c org Color whose rd departn of national de ake ind ‘support in the views estned to ard of Major Gen ral FT of the army WORLD PARLEY | 24. — (By With its pre military and hear- completed, 1 will by the includ sues empha ETON | | esume | of opinion m the ques- anization. Kadith Che Caspet Daily Cribune § most 1 oni PROB THOMPSON ived alr brought | | just as if gold were more 1 than happiness. If I could ed up once more I belleve important get rest I'd be as inane Making Martyr of Herself velopm of here » reason why a wife; ripen into a more sure love than 1 aviation in United | (or a husband, if the situation was | “love at first sight?” nd was pictured before the board hould al herself to | ‘some is hardly c General this a young man. I Maier sa vir 1ompson: I'm at that] cf Nature salt where a wife wonder 1 ¢ 6 In its attention to worth wh go on MRS. G. 1 ask “Is it a] commercial field, the board h p sat up part of the night f breach “of etiquette on theapart of ° ne echo of the military air dis ghts with the baby and I'm room not to © the bride a Y ndergquestion I could just sit down and] wedding present, when they are pe i aligned himself |bawl. But I’m not going. to do it,| of dinary circumstance retary of War Davis | for I've tried it before and it don't fan» matter ‘oF taste. (TI and Secretary Wilbur in opposing a|do any good, T got up at 4:30 this 1 may feel that they will need] unificat ir very to include | morning, tended my chickens and] the money in setting up their hous the air mail service got breakfast hubby and the} noid, v Mr. New's assertion that the} hired man, gave the baby her bath cee air mail serv had demonstrated | washed the dishes and separator,| BLUE EYE cannot put too dommercial aviation to be “an en:|swept the floor and fixed breakfast | much faith in adolescent heart tirely feasit thing” the board re-| for my 18-month-old gir and then }-r years of 1 *celved from Mr. Hoover the recom-|ironed, and it 10 o'clock and T}] pe 1 of change n ion th to rea its possi-|don’t know what to do ne T'd lie}ing thate the boy 1 ch: rnment should ei down and t » but if hubby }mind and doesn’t ate a to extend somewhat | came in ar he'd be so] affection for you as he u t s. o alr navigation that }™mad hi val t me for an-) (SRI DET GE to a [ suppose because I work in ter go out in the garden. Tut I've two ye exe hen I was ‘sick : in bed, and I’m so ti T know sGREAT ESTATE couldn't smile at anything, but my husband just keens working hard, BY VANDERBILT SHIN hant 4to3 header today in the in's th dl. ir walk sacrifice. It tory of th Reuther. the that the pany under its that it to ing subject yision, LONDC Premier fede between the failed to bri federation t tional cont bi | serious tHe opening game. East lodge of Ma: does not company hfs deels ldwin. Heading Into Heavy Seas and Storm rON, to Rice wa season distrib: n name, Sept. Press.)—Washington | to within two victories of the pen- by defeating Cleveland, ‘st game of a double and the eight 24.— cl for NEWS BRIEFS ute the. Me 7 © An unusual photo, showing the U. S. S, Seattle, flagship of Admiral Coontz, retiring commander- in-chief of the navy, driving into heavy seas and a gathering storm. The Seattle, of the newer type of scout cruisers, is one of the fastest vessels flying U.S. flag. < SENATORS WIN ONE OF THREE TITLE GAMES {Asso- imbed eighteenth home run of ason got Washington off to a ono run lead in the first inning of Cleveland knotted the count in the second, however, on Burn's double and a single by Spurgeon. Washington took the lead in: the fourth, 3 to 1. Go singled, Severeid doubled ‘ © brought them in on a ‘ow to left. seon again tied it up for and in the sixth by singling t after Leo and Burns had ‘Thé contest went 10 Innings; Gos- lin broke it up with a double fallow: MeN Dutch BOSTON.—Anthony D. Hall, 83, for 43 years manager of the Adams House, where President Coolidge made ‘his héme while governor of Massachusetts, died. He* was the oldest pr of the Star of HELENA, Mont.—Despite the fact latin Natural Gas com retail ontana ed, after a hear is a public utility and Conferenc and miners a ni “es the nd the commission's super- between miner's ition executive over the dispute operators an agreement. The s decided to call a na: nee of miners a in ¢ now wn buildir consi of shootin leyelAnd ar threaten I demnation to their ng in dele- The situation is described as peace toston, rounded up conde buildix emned. = con EW PASTOR ALSO. WORKER FOREDUCATION Rey. Holwell Directed Education for Colo- rado Federation. ‘The Rey. R. V. Holwell, who has succeeded the Willis Hugh Germany as pastor of the*East Side Methodist Community church, gave up important work {in Denver as direct of workers’ education for the Colorado te Federation of Labor in coming to. the Wyoming conference of the church, The suc- cess with which this work w - ried on is attested by the fact that during his two at the head of the Denver Labor college no strikes or lockouts occurred in Denver, all controversies being settled amicbaly without recourse to labor interrup- tion, Some 600 labor men were en- rolled in night classes under the Rey. Holwell’s direction, and they re- celved Instruction from university professors who donated their ser- vices. At the same time the Rev. Holwell was assistant pastor of Grace Com- munity ¢hureh in Denver. He com- pleted preparations-for the ministry In the Colorado capital by finishing. his studies at the Lift School of Th y and had held pastorates vl in and out of the city since ong there from the St. Louis con- ferchce in 1918. Prior to that time he was engaged in educational work in Missouri His p) for the will include exr along major lines ready 10 co-opers East Side church 9 in any particular of the working classes. —————@»— MRS, BRACE ROHN DES M@. Grace Rohn died*at midnight 1 home, st Midwest The b at the Shaffer- | be WK, MILTON DIES AT HOME INL FEL en completed, W. K. Milton, blacksmith at Midwest, died morning. He is survived by widew and by a daughter, M A. Ward, of Midwest. ‘The will be sent to Deny burial. It is at the chapel, LONDON, Press.)—An pateh fram Lapore reports the death Sept. 24.—(Associated Jammu and Kashmir is hig + Whose intima Charles FB. Robinson re: being muleted by a national bh fleeced n out of 000. Jammu and Ka richest provinces/in I to its year rhe army of lia and yleld: revenue overeiz maharaja command: 0,000 mer pretty as ever and hubby would loye me as much s he did before we POF I it. 24.- GENEVA, Sept. 24.—(Associated | were ma dd, because I've done lots | (By 1 Associated Press.)—A trust fress.)—The League of Nations as-| for him now and I hadn't done any-| fund of $5,000,000 was created for sembly t lopted amid enthu- | thing then. his two daughters in the will of the slasm, the French proposal for a WEARY WIF late Reginald C. Vanderbilt, filed for world wide economic con ence, make probate here today. ‘The r ainder M. Louicheur, a former Krench selves for whim of the estate, estimated to be worth minister of commerce and sponsor unt on th $7,000,000, was left to Mrs. Gloria of the project, warned the assembly hey don Morgan Vanderbilt, his widow. Mr that the task would be difficult and when you have gotten uderbilt died at his summer home sald the truth must not be concealed far with your work as | here on September 4. His will is to the world’s poeples that “it 18] you had when you wrote this let- | be probated by the town council at Y ible for us to consider the] ter, go and Ne down and take a | Portsmouth on October 12 r lem without the ald of the labor good le relaxing nap and if Mrs. Vanderbilt wa bequeathed organizations.” He wanted the aid} jiyppy hes you, let him rave, | outright the New York res of all nations in seeking a solution] Any woman with two babies on | the-Portsmouth estate and $ hich he cautioned might not be] her hands and a house, has no The will then directs th ichieved for s¢ One of} business in a garden, anyhow, and | 000,000 trust fund be created to the most heartily applauded points} jt would be much better to lose | divided equally ‘between Mrs, Mary made was that “tariff policies! your garden, and get the rest you | Necushing, 4d, his daughter by his bie ined aside from fist sorely need, than to have ft, flour- rst marriage, and _ one-year-old I Hnshelas ts of Italy, Holland ter y are under the | Gloria Vanderbilt. spin onmslint von oP aly Acoten, The residue to go to the widow ves ingens ada pr Pye cy While estimates as to the value of mae eottis mh jopted' China's LOVE AT FIRST SIGHT the emainde of the estate we ition that due sard for g¢ Dear Thompson: 1 didn’t | ae bes a. ee, c oan suena phicnl and other considerations | eat first ne until | ramity. that it ‘A i simexted Gn Alling 3e the other T met # young man | ooo oon ay es 1 1,| who attracted my attention and of « \1 in is handsome and| , vad dade. : pted de-| 1 od qualities, but | jj) a wanes 1 1 r Ns ‘exe ‘ itt another girl, but seems i 1 negro, 1 care for me. Am I foolish to is nd in t < of him? He ts six years my vi doin to get and I am compelled: to walt tired?" der her y years. Do you think In the Over to I mith's dey are he will still care for me? nd ¢ for some new | Would you advise me to keep him in Dey haven't got no yawd: | view or forget him? E. R. stich nd 1 etl six You shouldn't be thinking of tall » to oblige Brot Smith, ) him’ seriously, at least so soon at. | 1 1 and agettin’ | te eting him, Only time can. | ra ther you will hold his in = =r in the future ¢ oper | him in ylew" s Y 0 in Leonard 1 Wh. not be just good Wood's ¢ palgn » court In] friends as long friendship lasts | ‘ } and wait for friendship’ to We have as our Make this 29 25) Globe Shoe Co. | . SERVICE more than intelligent cour Sales-effort when you'r It means, besides, conscigh “after-sale” attention. leading line— Smith Smart Shoes $7.50 TO $10.00 shop your shoe headquarters. We 0 South Center Street ‘ Sta IN To our way of thinking, means teous here. tious And that your pleasure may surely be permanent. Give mps Russian fashion “sweetheart knot.” la N Color Rules in Autumn Clothes Kingdom 4 Color is queen of the kingdom of clothes this season.“ The debutante trock of moonlight blue net (left) has « bodice of metal cloth, and the lace shoulder cape is edged with colored beads. skirt consists of four tiers of blue net ruffles. The Scarf (right) is brilliant with color and is tied in Fee A eee azimova, while the equally bright colored one (center) employs the so-called n and growth nd he also stands educa- tional movement for the benefit in AT HOME ON MIDWEST ars of age, t night at her avenue. y chap- el, Funeral arrangements have not 0 years of age, a this the vu. ody tonight for Shaffer-Gay MAHARAJA IN INDIA DEAD xchange telegraph dis- nephew, inter- rational notoriety last winter as the with Mrs. ted in his hand of inter Sir Hart was lumir isfone of the n of $6,000,000 THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1925 —————————————— | ‘Charlie Chaplin Coming Here in “The Gold Rush At last, the world's foremost come- dian, Charlie Chaplin, has launched his greatest- comedy. “The Gold Rush” on the sea of popular fancy. Announcement is made/by Manager Garside of the America theater, that he has paid the record price for any photoplay ever shown in Casper and that the celebfated star’s new United Artists corporation release comes here’ next Thursday, October 1, For sixteen months, Charlie Chap- lin worked on this production. Dur- ing that time he was practically a hermit—recluse to all, save his stu- dio associates. Only the vaguest an- nouncements of progress on “The Gold Rush” came from his studio, ‘The factory systém of movies, and the consequent mediocrity as an art, have in Charlie Chaplin an example of the opposite production method in this dramtic comedy. It has been made with the artist’s necessary lel- sure, It was never restricted by def- inite schedule or time-clock methods, but inspired by Chaplin with a pas- sion for perfection as his only task- master. When Chaplin works, he burrows into solitude. He broods, agonizes, sweats comedy and its dramatic counterbalance from his soul. He creates by inspiration. When the mood is upon him, he tolls fever- ishly. Then le may rest and brood again for weeks— and always when the productive throes are upon him he ts sensitive tothe thumpings of the outside world. Chaplin senses, and expresses more than any other entertainer, the close affinity between the ludjcrous and the pathetic; his comedy » springs from within—more as a matter of mood than of circumstance. Usually he needs very little story, structure to his comedy, but in “The Gold BUS ROUTE TO DENVER PROVES POPULAR WITH THE TRAVELING PUBLIC Each day finds the luxurious par- lor cars of the Roysl Blue Lines well filled with Denyer-bound pas- sengers as {t pulls away from the downtown section in Casper, The daylight ride to Denver is becoming more popular each day, as the ex- cellent riding quality and smooth, ensy speed of the big Fageol busses becomes known. The cars make a twelve-hour trip between this city and Denver, leav- Ing the! three down-town hotels he: at 8 a.m, daily, Short stops made at towns along the route and a half hour stop is made at Wheat- land on the trip south for dinner. ‘The dinner stop on the return trip is at Cheyenne. A number of Casper and Denver business #men are interested in the new line and are well: pleased to see their enterprise gaining headway so rapidly. ADA LEWIS OF COMEDY FAME: DEAD NEW YORK, Sept. 24.-(By The n | Associated Press}—Ada Lewis, prom- d of Lieutenant General Sir Pratat | inent on the stage as a comedienne Zing, maharaja of Jammu_ and for almost forty years, died today at Kashmir. her home in Hollis, Long Island, +The heir to the maharaja of | following a nervous breakdown last January. The veteran‘actreas had been tn a sjate of coma during the last four days. Miss Lewis, who in private life was Mrs. John Parr, was 53 years old. While she was still in her teens she originated the stage character of a’Tough girl” with which her name and fame was always a success. She boasted of never haying missed a performance in her stage career of 35 years, vce | he kal ROCK SPRINGS MAN 3 MADE STATE AGENT CHEYENNE, Wyo., Sept.-24.—J. F, Stagner of Rock Springs, was ap- pointed a field agent of the state law enforcement department, {t was an- nounced Tuesday by L. D, Christen- sen, new state commissioner of law enforcement. Stagner'’s appointment completes the personnel of the department, it {s reported, Two other new agents, Clayton Danks of Rawlins, an Peter Staten of Cheyenne, were appointed recently, bringing the total to five, as J, 5, Armstrong of Thermopolis, and C. E, Fenwick of Burns, were held over from the Wachtel regime, it is sald. ————_. —.- if 5 Solomon has attested to the strangeness of a man's way with a maid, but the way of a maid being courted has always been a mystery to a man, A girl dismissed her sweetheart with the statement that shé could, not think of marrying him unul he had a few thousand dollars, A few months later she met him and asked him how much he had saved. "Thirty-five dollars,” he said. Well," she remarked with a blush. “I guess that's near enough.” Sis society Uncle Lem bought a clock, so tall that it was almost impossible to get it into the house. The old man was extremely proud of it and found it very good company. He would lie awake nights to hear it tick. One night the clock got out of order and began to strike, The old man awoke and counted 102, He promptly sat up in bed, and, call- ing his wife, said: “Cynthy, get up, get up! It’s later than I've ever Knew it to be." “A Rush” he has created a rugged story in which ughter surges from the spectacle of a valiant we kling; fac- perils ayhich strewed the paths of the early gold seekers with skele- tons. In the role of a hardluck sour- Gough, dressed in the paggy pants, the floppy shoes, the old derby and funny cane “of y association, Charlie twists the sufferings of the Alaskan pioneers into a strange dy. rbid- commingling ot humor and t He thaws fun from a frosty ding background. ‘The treatment is wholly unlike» anything hitherto done, and strikes a new mote in photo dramatics. Charlie Chaplin's “The Gold Rush" contains comefy, drama, satire, melo-drama, farce. Not toeforget a little slapstick—and everything else in the w of entertainment.all roll- ed into one big ten reeled film, This great picture will-be shown in Casper at the America theater for the first time next Thursday eve- ning, and Manager Garside has made special arrangements for the hand- ling of the crowds, Also first ald treatment will be rendered to those overcome by laughter. Execution To Be Viewed By Woman Bailie GLASGOW, Sept. 24.—(Associated Press)—A little white haired, kindly faced Scotch Indy-—Mrs. Mary Bell —this morning faced tlfe ordeal of witnessing’ the execution of a mur- derer. She holds the office of haille and under the statutes the baille must attend all hangings. She apparently fs the first woman to hold such a position in Great Britain. Sympathetic officiala who advised her not to attend, were told: “I don’t see that just because I am a woman I should shirk my duty In the least. When women took up work on public duies, they were not elected just to choose the task that sulted them best.” ‘The execution Keen, for murder. pa koe is that of John A prominent physiejan was re- cently called to his telephone by a colored woman formerly in the ser- vice of his wife. In great agitation the woman advised the physician that her youngest child was in a bad way. “What seems to be the trouble?” asked the doctor. “Dos, she done swallered a bottle of Ink!" “I'll be over there in a short while to see her,” said the doctor. ‘Have you done anything for her?" “I done give her three pieces o’ blottin’-paper, Doc,” said the colored woman doubtful Solid Head Lettuce 469 STUDENTS NOWENROLLED TWYOMING Contract Awarded for New Engineering _ Building. LARAMIE, Wyo., Sept. 24.—(By oclated Press).—Enrollment at the University of Wyoming on the third day of registration, was 863. This is an Increase of approximately 300 per cent over the enroliment at the same time five years ago. En- rollment also shows an increase of 200 over figures for last year, or nearly twenty-five per cent. LARAMIE, Wyo., Sept. 24.—Asso- clated Press)—Contract for an en- gineering building, to house admin- istrative offices, work shops and s rooms at the University of ming, was let to W. J. Wilseck of Cheyenne. ‘This is to be the pr cipal addition this year to the phy- sical plant. The bid was $133,000. Bids ranging as high as $151,000 were received’ from four others. Johnson & Davis of Denver, got the plumbing and heating contract for the buildihg on a bid of $14,989. A ird contract Jet to a Laramie firm to build a granery at Agronamy farm at of $10,260. a cc Frontier Days Date For ’26 Announced CHEYENNE, Wyo. Sept. 24.— Frontier Days will be held from July 27 to 31, 1926, it was announced by the committee Tuesday, the change in dates having been effected be- cause {t will be impossible to have soldiers from Fort D, A. Russell par- tleipate on the dates previously set. STATUTORY OFFENSE IS CHARGED TO WAN HELD ON WOMAN'S COMPLAINT A complaint was sworn out Wed- nesday afternoon against George Schwertfeger, charging him with an attempted statutory offense. The complaint was filed by V, E. Nielsen. Ethel M. Nielsen, wife of the com- plaining witness, Is alleged to have been the victim +f an assault by FRIDAY AND SATURDAY SPECIALS Elberta Peaches, per crate_________$, King David Eating Apples, bushel_§$} Good Jonathan Apples, box_ Concord Grapes, basket. Last shipment of Rocky Ford Watermelons weighing from 25 to 30 lbs., each___@5@ Large Pascal Celery _ Sweet Potatoes®_____ Quality Products at Lowest Cost—Has Always Been Our Direct Aim. > RIALTO FRUIT Store RIALTO THEATER BUILDING Schwertfeger, July 15. Schwert- feger had not been arrested early this afternoon, although such action was pending. He is an accountant -$2.35 0c ___4 FOR 95 _9 FOR are ___3 LBS. 95¢ GOLD RUSH” A Dramatic Comedy. Written and Directed by CHARLIE + CHAPLIN Heartaches become rib ticklers Tragedies turn to laughter __ Miseries bring mirthfulness Hardships breed chuckles As Chaplin burlesques all the Human Ills DAYS Ist Beginning Thurs, Oct.

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