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Boa ae oa ‘TUESDAY, MARCH 30, 1920 CONFERENCES O INTERCHURCH I COUNTIES SOON Campaign Planned by 30 Denom-| inations to Be Brought Nearer Horie’ in Meets Scheduled. |~ 1 for Next Week. To present the program, plan of cam-| paign and purposes of the Interchurch ‘World Movement clearly before the peo- ple and to complete the ofganization of the movement in every community, n series of county conferences -begin- ning April 6 and lastitig until “April 18 has been announced-by A. F. Stewart, state secretary of Wyoming. The financial campaign, April 25 to May 2, will be emphasized at these meetings. These conferences wil! he held In each county under the direction of a team of speakers selected from} the men and women who attended the state pastors’ conference at Douglas. The four departments of the _ Inte urch World Movement, stewardship, spiritual resources, missionary educa- tion and life service, will be presented at ‘these mectings together with lec- tures and slides showing the work} which has been inaugurated under the direction of the movement. At these conferences will he two-dele- gates from each preaching precinct in the counties. An executive committee corsisting of five mfnisters, five lay- wrer. and five women will be appointed) to have charge of the county organiza-| tion < | Wyoming has been divided into tive| froupsor districts “for these county ccnferences with a leader and list of speakers for each. The following is the hist of groups with the team leaders, places And ‘dates of conferences and the men in: charge of the arrangements: | Group No. 1. Rev. W.-H. L.. Marshall, leader; Rev. Tt. B. Atkinson, Stewardshi Rev. W.) ‘T Dumm, Life Work; Rev. W. A. Free- man, spiritual resources; Rey. David McMartin, missidnary education; Mr. I. A. Shope, financial director. Douglas, April 2, for Niobrara, Platte, ‘Converse and Natrona counties; Rev.) W. H. L. Marshall, Group No. 2. Rey. E. B, Davis, leader; Rev. D, B.) ‘Atkinson, stewardship; Rev. W. 1. Dumm, life work; Rev J. F. Blodg-t, s1Jritual resources; Rev. J. Young-! claus, missionary educatio! Rev. W. 1 le, financial director. Rock Springs, April 6, for Lin- coin,’ Uinta and Sweetwater cuuates, Rey. BE. B. Davis. Laramie, April 8, for Albany «nd; Curbon counties, Rev. F. S. Delo. Group No. 3. Rev. N..M. Temple, leadew; Rev. D. B, Atkinson, stewardship; Rev. W. T. In.mm, life work; Rev J. F. Blodgeit, s}iritual resources; Rev. David Me- Martin, missionary education; Rev. W. L, Wade, financial dtrector. Cheyenne, April 9 for Iaramie «ani Goshen_counti : roup No, 4. Rev. R. M. Jones, leader; and stew- ardship; Rev, F. W. Bretnall, life work; Rev. R. B. Walker, spiritual resources; Rev. W. C. Lowroi, missionary educa- tion. ‘hermopolis, April 14, for Fremont, Hot Springs. and .Washakie counties. Rey, W. K. March. Basin, April 15, for Park and Big Horn counties; Rev. R. M. Jones. >. + Group No. 5. Rev. M.D. Long, Wader; Rev. R. M. Jones, stewardship; Rev Wi. H. L. Lowiie, missionary education. Gillette, April 7, for Weston, Crook and Campbell counties, Rev. G. H. Gamble. a Sheridan, April 8, for Sheridan aha Jchnson_counties, Re D. Lon) - ’ i « FISHER MAID, SHE LED AT; SPRING’S CHILL Delightfully .comfortable is jique wrap, which is collared and banded in “oppossum. The creative idea is original-in this kind of wrap and fisher maid is easily adaptable to un- usual draping and arrangement. END BENNETT STIRS IS FILM TOOK If you should ever spend a day in the POSTOFFICE EXAM. FOR ALCOVA POST TO COME UIP IN GASPER APRIL 10 The United States civil service com- mission has announced on examination to be held at Casper Wyoming, on April 10, 1920, as a result of which it is expected to make certification to fill a contemplated vacancy in the position of fourth-class postmaster at Aléova, Wyo- ming, and other vacancies as they may occur.at that office, unless it shall, be decided in the interests of the service to fill any vacancy by reinstatement. The compensation of the postmaster at | this office was $248 for the last fiscal Applicants must have reached their \ twenty-first birthday on the dafe of the examination, with the exception that in |a state where women are declared by statute to be at full age for all purposes jat eighteen years, women eighteen years of age on the date of the examination will be admitted. Applicants must. reside within the territor postoffice for which xi announced. Th nination is open to all citizens of the United States who can comply with the requireme Application blanks, Form 1753, and }full information concerning the re jauirements of the examination can be 1 from the postmaster at the e of vacancy or from the United States Civil § ice Commission, Wash- ington, LD. C, Applications should be properly exe- Washington, Db. C., at the earliest prac- tical date. |MINERS 10 CELEBRATE GHOUR ANNIVERSARY HUDSON, Wyo., March 30.—Big cele- brations are being arranged for April 1 at Hudson and Poposia to mark the anniversary of the eight-hour miners’ Athletic curds,, parades and ng are planned as part of the big Thomas H. Ince motion picture studio while dainty Enid Bennett is working in‘a picture, you would be sur- prised to see the entire cast stop work at about four_o'clock in the afternoon, and drawing up easy chairs seat them- selves comfortably around a table upon which a little tea pot steams merrily. Then Miss Bennett herself fills the “cup that cheers but does not inebriate’’ and the company. forgets the screen for) some minutes ‘and cheerfully chats on} all manner of topics. Miss Rennett’ is an Australian and, tho quite thoroy Americanized, is still addicted to the-English afternoon tea habit. Fred Niblo, her diregtor, and likewise her husband, is converted to to the idea that & few moments” relaxa- tion in the middie of the afternoon has a good effect upon the players. Miss Bennett's latest Ince picture, “What Every Woman Learns,” will be shown at the Iris theatre today. Milton Irving Rev. N. M, ‘Temp! Sills, Theodore ~ Roberts and a a Bookkeepers and Accountants, A prominent firm of certified public accountants offers an unusual oppor- tunity td a limited number of ambitious | men to qualifiy for one of the $2,500 to! $10,000 a year positions now open; spe-| cial senior coaching for those “desiring | Cc. P. A. degree; previous experience de-}| sirable, but -not absolutely necessary if | you are willing’to study hard for aj .short period during spare time:; appll- cants will be granted a confidential per- sonal interview; in replying state age, | previous experience (if any), where em-| ployed and phone number. Box 133, care Tribune. - Its dollars — to doughnuts— no man cigarette at any price! AAMELS quality, and their expert blend C of choice Turkish and choice Domestic tobaccos hand you a cigarette that will sat- isfy every smoke | cuted and tiled with the commission at |‘ SWEET PEA SEEDS GIVE AWAY FREE Tuesday, April 6, at the Casper Pharmacy 110 E. 2nd St. Casper ever smoked a better desire you ever expressed, You will prefer this Camel blend to either kind smoked straight! Camels mellow-mildness will certainly appeal to you. The “body” is all there, and that smoothness! It’s a delight! - Go the limit with Camels! They will not: tire your taste. And, they leave no npleas- ant cigaretty aftertaste nor unpleasant ciga- retty odor! Just compare Camels with any ciga- rette in the world at any price! where in scientifically sealed yr ten pack- cents, covered ages ton, recommen See ema or office supply or whon you travel. g. J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO CO., Winston-Salem, N.C. Che casper Daily Ccibune e Two Great Novels of the Year HALL CAINE! VICENTE BLASCO IBANEZ! What other living novel- ists have been so universally acclaimed by critic and public alike thtoughout the entire civilized world? The Christian, The Eternal City, The Prodigal Son, The Woman Thou Gavest Me—Mare Nostrum, Blood and Sand, The Four Horse- men of the Apocalypse—these were not only great novels in the literary sense but tremendous popular successes as well. Hearst’s Magazine now offers you—simultaneously—the new novels of both these eat novelists. Zhe Master of an, by Sir Hall Caine, just started, will continue into the summer /and, in the issue now on the newsstands, you will find the first chapters of Thé Enemies of Women, by Vicente Blasco Ibanez. Maurice Maeterlinck on Life After Death Is there Life after DeathP This is the greatest of all human problems. Many of us profess to believe in Immortality—all of us want to—but how many of us really do believe? Maurice Maeterlinck, the great Belgian philosopher, has beén lecturing in America on this subject. But he wanted to reach a vaster audience-+so he had his famous lecture translated into English and published in Hearst’s. See “Eternal Life or Eternal Death” — Hearst’s for April s Bernard Shaw on Ireland Will the Irish question ever be settled? In his latest desperate effort to please both sides; Lloyd George seems only to have succeeded in enraging both. His vacillating policy is severely scored by Bernard Shaw, who in the April Hearst’s suggests that the too easily swayed British Premier “‘visit America and there learn the cult of the man who can look his fellowman (or newspaper) in the eye and tell him to go to Hell.” See “The Betrayal of Ulster,” in Hearst’s for April The Best Short Stories in, Any Magazine Are you looking for short stories far above the averageP Then you'll enjoy the kind you find in Hearst's. In April for instance—read Just a Minute Please, by Larry Evans; Clothilda’s Mistake,by Bruno Lessing; At Fool’s Acre, by Robert W. Chambers; The Preposterous Partner, by Ralph Stock; Twelve Seats in Row E, by Arthur Somers Roche; and The Beggar, by Maurice Level, the O. Henry of France. You'll have a new idea of how good short stories canbe. Only the dest writers are allowed in Hearst’s. Hearst’s for April Arnold Bennett on Marriage What is the matter with Marriage? Last month a New York woman lawyer told why some men dis- like their wives. Now Arnold Bennett, the famous British novelist, wrestles With the same ptoblem in a series of stories “*The Married Life of Jack and Jill.’ This month he gives us Jack’s side of the case —next month, Jill’s. Man or woman—married or single—you’ll enjoy—and perhaps profit by—this unique series. See Hearst’s for April Georges Clemenceau on Poland Georges Clemenceau, ex-Premier of. France, is as polished a writer as he is a diplomat, though his fame as a novelist and playwright has been eclipsed by the brilliance of his political career. In Hearst’s for April, Clemenceau, the writer, gives us a vibrantly realistic picture of Poland as it is to-day, not of its politics, but of its people, just as “The Tiger’ himself saw_them on a recent trip to Cracow. See “Into the Muds of Poland,” in Hearst’s for April Humor—Poetry—Science Art—Drama And still we hfiven’t told you half hel aa things in Hearst’s for April. The Clerks and the Bells, Rudyard Kipling’s latest poem; The Right to Think Wrong, by Charles Edward Russell; Cold Ham and Lemonade, by Justin McGrath; J Ask You William, by K.C.B.; Our Favorite Cow, by B. L. T.; How Dickens Did It, by Walt Mason; Why Governor Lowden?, by Kay Mackarness; The Art, Book, Play and Science of the Month—we haven’t space to tell you about them here, but you'll find them all in Hearst’s for April fF you are content with an ordinary magazine, if you are not willing to pay well for the very best, you won’t want Hearst’s this month or any other. But if you really want the works of the world’s great writers—the words of the world’s great thinkers—make sure each month—starting today with the April number: of your copy of _$Hearst’s A Magazine with a Mission EE -Chas. M. Gunnison Wholesale Distributor lepot 153 South Center St. Telephone 256