Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, March 31, 1920, Page 2

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PAGETWO GD BUSINESS AND ROOM WOMEN TAKE LEAD IN ORGANIZING CLUB DESTINED FOR GREAT WORK Committees on Permanent Organization to. Report at! Meeting Next Week; Location of Y. W.C. A. - | Building also Discussed at Conference Sixty business and professional women of Casper took the! first steps toward the formation of a Business and Professional | Women’s club to be a part ef the Y.'W. C. A. organization when they met at the Episcopal parish house last night. | Miss Margaret Douds, appointed at the business girls’ ban- quet two weeks ago to have charge of the ‘organization, pre- sided and Miss Bertha R. Miller of the Denver office of the Y. W. C. A. out lined the possibilities of such an ergani- zation. She told of the work which is Heing | done by similar clubs all over the coun- try, of the recent federation of ees 88 | women's clubs and the efforts bei made at the present time to sthunat| ize those clubs, Meetings are generally held each week, all business being transacted at the first meeting of the month, the sec- ond being of a social nature, the third being devoted to self improvement and the fourth being optional. She read suggested programs for tht self improvement meeting which includ- ed discussions of such subjects as prop- er dress for women in business, busi- ness ethics of various kinds, standards of living on certain salaries, and a number of similar subjects of interest to girls earning their own living. After a little discussion the girls voted unanimously to proceed with organiza. tion and the following committees were appointed: Nominating committee, Miss Blanch Toland, Miss Hulda Feiring, Mrs. J. W. Burns, Miss Mabel Johnson, Miss Selma Young, tion committee, Miss Ruth Dudley, Miss Lola Miller, Miss Reddington; member- ship committee, Miss Beatrice Boede- feld, Mrs. Dorothy Spitzer, Miss Clara Carpenter, Miss Marie Ross, Miss Frances Yeomane, program. and social committee, Mee Winter, Miss Hlizabeth Miss Pauline Wickstrum, Miss. Freda Watkins, Miss Marie Engaride, Miss! Helen Carlson. At the conclusion of the business Miss meeting a brief time was taken for the | discussion of the girls' ideas regarding the best location for the Y. W. C. A., at the request of Mrs. B. B. Brooks. The} girls seemed almost altogether of the | opinion that to reach the greater num- ber of girls the building should be be-* tween the railroads and not more than feur or five blocks from the center of} town. A half hour was then devoted to! stunts, impromptu theatricals and music’ after which refreshments which had been donated for the occasion were served under the direction of the com: mittee in charge of the meeting. This committee wishes to extend its] thanks to the Natrona Butter shop for cream, to Mr. Shikany of the City Fruit market for sugar, to the White Grocery for coffee, to the Wigwam for cakes nna to those who contributed toward the purchasing of the ice cream. The committees appointed last night are expected to meet within a week and to report at another meeting which will be held either next week or the week following at the cal] of Mise senuds, oe NEGRO STALKED BY PHANTOM IS TAKEN TO JAIL George Oliver, a negro, who suffers from the hallucination that he is being followed and that his life is in danger, was taken into custody en the Sand Bar yesterday and is. confined to the county jail for investigation cs to his sanity. M, W. Purcell, attorney, has returr from Denver, Colo., and Rawlins, PROMINENT FOLKS TESTIFY Sacramento, Calif.:—“For years I was a great nuflores 1 had indiges very badly and it see! that there was no help for me as I had tried so. many, many different, remedies ay tting y hel} Tivied od Dr. Golden Discovery and cured me. A oul $280 2nd Ave. AFTER INFLUENZA Heart and Circulation Bad Baker City,”Oregon:—“I was taken with Influenza. aauary 4th and also had a any vee My stomach was ee han any food for three oF year <n and I gas and sourness. I Pierce's rir ii I took | two bottles,” | CunveEnson, doctored withmy two favorite doetors and a Chiropractic | nerves were so badly de- | ranged that twang on the of hysteria, My heart was bad and qpeutaion 89 | had that my limbs were alm who said aralyzed. One day Uxent for a copy of Dr. Pierce's Common Sense Medical ‘Aainer which 1 read and decided to make a trial of Dr. Pierce’s medicines. At that time I was only able to stay up a few minutes at a lime. After taking two bottles Iwas ble to be on my feet all day. J am now able to eat anything without discomfort | aud never have the dryness in my mouth in the mornitig nor any bowel ‘troubie. ‘The ‘Pleasant Pellets’ and the ‘Medical Discovery’ according to the salt baths as directed in the ‘Medical Adviser’ were all I used. I walk 18 or 19 blocks at a time now and. feel no ill effects, “Wall alway Fecueticg, hls. Chure! recommend Dr, Pierce’s Wat. Hoacanp, 2630 Miss Ann Thompson; constitu-| Miss Clara Shutz;! ¥ nally, j was troubled with | irections, and ; ‘ST. MARK’S CHURCH 10 SELL BUILOING, GOST ‘OF MOVING TOO HIGH Accompanied Diet a building ttre | Bishop N. 8. Thomas of the Episcopal } Church arrived here this morning from | Cheyenne and held a special confer- ence with the members of the vestry} of St. Mark’s Church in regard to the | advisability of moving the church | building front the lot at the corner of Second and Wolcott streets, which was recently sold, to the South Wolcott) street location owned by the church. however, was thought to be prohibitive | by the vestry, and it was decided to | offer all the buildings on the lot for | sale. This includes the brick church, | the frame parish house, and the one- story, six-room dwelling house used as the rectory, { MISSIONARIES RETURN FROM | LECTURE TOUR| | Rev. and Mrs. Robert R. Marquis, ; Sunday school missionaries for the | Sheridan Presbytery, have returned to ; Casper, which is their headquarters,’ after a four months’ stay In New York | City. Mr. Marquis has been lecturing in New York in the interests of the Presbyterian Board of Sunday School | Work, presenting his work‘in the great. Bahin, | | Rogers of New York, with her husband, jare now in France on their way to New The price set by the building mover,! si West before the New York Presbyterian churches. i Mr. and Mrs. Marquis found the peo-! ple @f the East very greatly interested j in Wyoming and in’ thé: pictures 6f life and scenery in the West, which Mr. Marquis displayed to illustrate his lec- tures. | Mr. and Mrs. Marquis are at the West Hotel, u FOOT IIIT IOPIOPT ICL CELE Easter Lily plant. surely appreciate be Caspe + Daiip BOY'S SKULL {8 “FRACTURED, WAS ~OTAUCK BY AUTO | bus: ‘Rollin Ormsby in Serious Condition| as Result of Accident on South Cejiter Tues- day Afternoon ine eng for Rollin Ormsby, 14-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Major. Ormsby, 438 South | Center street, sustained a fractured | ~ | skull when struek by a car driyen’ by Hugh Giffin as he was crossing Cen- ter street, near the corner of Delaware ‘ yesterday afternoon, | ~The boy stopped to let a taxi go past | and. then stepped directly tn the path f of the car driven by Giffin, which he failed) to see. Both bystanders and DONG members of the family state that the! Chypertiony ATONIC pote < i ICAN PRINCESS ‘HERE ON VISIT—Princess Christian of Hesse, Who‘was Miss Hlizabeth Reid, York. The princess’ father is general’ vounsel of the Interbérough Rapid! ‘Transit company of New York. FIREMEN PLAN TO JOIN STRIKE | CITY EMPLOYES | (By United Press.) | CHICAGO, Mar. 31.—City firemen | may join other municipal employes striking for higher wages, it is said | Saree ‘ASPER PHARMAGY, 110 E. Second St. here. The city hall has been picketed by strikitg clerks, bookkeepérs and per cent Reduction For the balance of this week on all Street Coats and Dresses 20 Per Cent Réduction ON ALL Waists and Silk Underwear Ladies, our ‘stock, is all new and up-to-the-minute in style: No old stock to be worked off ‘ Flowers for Easter Every home should symbolize ihe day with a beautiful Easter gift. The finest, purest, hardiest v now, very reasonably priced. JWe have a splendid stock of potted plants in almost every pleasure to show you our assortment. You may phone your ance of conscientious selection, careful ayers prompt serv: The mother, the wife, th your thoughtfulness if eetheart will. - bestow an every assur- f The F. T. D, is a nice way to remember friends and rel points. Let us tell you about it. KR? } | | 406\South Center Street ggsveaasnervbrparabeces Casper Floral Com ELE LE LP LE SE LP ET Lldededet retook Freatlond at + RD oe *, at acs e+, 2 >, St + Phone 872 > oy The boy's condition vernent today, but the Injury iti Bie ioe Seyripaaae, Mrs. Rex Fanning left this afternoon; Rochester, Minn., undergo brothers. 5 We of the ear Was not to blame for! hich is most serious. Eribune |NORBY BEGINS 4-YEAR TERM IN STATE PEN, [BLO Y’S TAXI Chandler anne ent. showed a slight | where she will the Maya! Deputy Sheriff William Kyte returned os | yesterday from Rawlins, where he took | . Algeo has returped from a! A. B. Norb; a term or New York city... four to s treatment from Pop-Overs for Breakfast! Just the crispest, brownest, lightest muffins in the world and made so easily if one just knows the secret. POP-OVERS 3 eg 2 cupfls flour Borden’s Evaporated Milk « % small teaspoonful salt 1 cupful water. Beat the eggs ten minutes and then add the milk. Gradually add the flour, sifted, and the salt. Beat until absolutely smooth, Evaporated 7 Milk WITH THE CREAM LEFT IN is always ready to be ‘used—always rich and good. Order at least a half-dozen cans from _ your Grocer—aiid have it on hand to réplace fresh cream and milk-wherever they are gener- THE BORDEN COMPANY Borden Building © New York Vipnuae EVAPORATED “MTLK. ror ee Our Clothes for men and young men are the 2% St te a ea pride of those who-make them; the pride of we that sell them, and the pride of the fellows who wear them. Suits by Hart Schaffner & Marx and Styleplus. “$35, $40, $5, ot, $55 and up Beautiful Silk Shirts The kind that well-dressed men will be wearing—Wilson Bros. and Manhattan. $6:50, $8.00, $8.50. and us A new nifty line of Spring Neckwear in the most ex- $1.00 to $5.00 quisite colorings. cS "es i ie ee ee This Desaitment for the sturdy growing boy . is most complete with a stock of Suits, Hats, Caps, - Shirts, Neckwear, etc The _ Store Accommodating Sn lave oo Roto ato ats 2. toate ol o The Home of Hart Schaffner & Marx Clothes cv o, de etontet Serer Cor indngotnnndncreripe parr oa 2. 2 <> Pasre-stectes p-eipatprge-age-che-fo-aho-efo-ofe-a%o-4) 24 KS

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