Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, May 7, 1920, Page 3

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Surprise Party on Birth Anniversary. Miss Esther Castle was surprised b; a.number of her friends yesterday eve ning at a party arranged by Miss Anna Mall in honor of the fifteenth birthday of Miss Castle. Fifteen schoolmate: were*the guests and after a pleasant evening a delicious luncheon was served by Mrs. Castle. The wut of town guests at the party were Mr. and Mrs. Hole-| man and Helen Holdeman of Parkerton, Wyoming. | see Thursday Night Dancing Party Well Attended. The Thursday night dancing party! chaperoned by members of the Women’s Auxiliary of the American Legion was| & well attended affair. | The dancing started at 9 o'clock to the} music of the new American Legion| jazz orchestra and the last dance was at midnight. eee | “Calico” Dance Tonight. The Mullin club will be the scene of} an original dancing party this evening,} for which invitations have been issued to many of the younger society people of town. In order to be*“up to the times'! the young ladies will wear gin; ham gowns or aprons, and the young men will join the overall club for the evening. Decorations in keeping. have been arranged, and refreshments, ap- propriate to the idea of the entertain ment, will be, served. * | . Monday Club to Meet. Mrs. R. C. Wyland, assisted by Mrs. James Gratiot, will entertain the mem- bers of the Monday club at her home, 924 South Wolcott street, Monday after non at 1 o'clock. . Plans Completed for May Sale. A large and enthusiastic meeting of | the ladies of the St. afark's guild was held yesterday afternoon at the home of Mts. Henry Bayer. During the busi- ness meeting plans weve perfected for the May Sale which will be held in the Parish house of the St. Mark’s church tomorrow afternoon and evening. After the business session lovely re- freshments were served by Mrs. Bayer assisted by Mrs. J. J. Svendsen. The salé in the Parish house will in-| clude fancy work, aprons, garments, baked goods and miscellan- eous articles, In the afternoon tea, sandwiches and cake will be served and in the evening a musical program with numbers given by the most talent- ed in, Casper avill be heard. The iadi+s of the Guild -will serve ice cream and cake in the evening. The sale will start promptly o'clock in the afternoon with a selection of handmade articles. In’ the evening carnations will sold commorating Mothers’ day. eee Elaborate - Luncheon Last of Series. An elaborate bridge luncheon, the last of a series to be given by the Mesdames Thomas Cooper and Willlam Bailey was given in the lovely new home of Mrs. Bailey on South Wolcott street, yesterday afternoon. The decorations of the afternoon were pink roses wit1 appointments following the color scheme of pink and white. The afternoon was spent playing auc: tion bridge, and the Mesdames W. A. Blackmore and John McFadyen were awarded the honors of the afternoon, eee Janior Prom. onight. The Junior Class of the Natrona County high school will entertain in honor of the graduation class this eve- ning at a dance at the Masonic*Temple. It)-willbe formal forthe girls only. Decorations in the class colors will be at 2 wide be re arranged in the Temple, ds] feature dances and: surprises planned. ore Beleau-Pollock Marriage. Mrs. Betha Pollock and Fred Beleau were quietly married last night by the Rey. Robert L, Lemons of the First Baptist church, at the parsonage of the church, \Mrs. Beleau wore a dark tail- ored gown with a corsage boquet of white roses. Mr. and Mrs. Beleau will not take a wedding trip at the present, and will! be at home to their friends in the Smith apartments. Mrs. Beleau came to Casper from | Vida Bacon and Clarence children’s} | Mrs. John Doren. * ‘ely en Chicago, and ha seen in charge of the Marinello parlors here. formerly # resident linnesota. ot Minneapolis, - Mrs. Trevett to Entertain. The first of a series of bridge lunch- eons to be given by Mrs. Guy H. Tre vett will be given at her home on Grant avenue next Tuesday afternoon. Pars East and West Side Circles | Hold Baked Sales. The East side circle of the Presby- terian Ladies Aid society will hold a baked sale at the Casper Storage store this Saturday afternoon at 2 o'clock. The West side circle will hold a sale the same afternoon at the Shikany grocery store from 2 to 5 o'clock. “ee Waygood-Bacon Ceremony Performed. The simple services uniting Miss Waygood | were performed yesterday afternoon by| the Rey. Philip K. Edwards at the Epis- copal church. The bride and groom were attended by Miss Anita Reese and Justin -Newell, and only the relatives |of the young couple were guests at the | wedding ceremony. fter the services ja wedding dinner was served, followed by a reception. . | Mrs. Chris Wagner has returned from an extended trip to Canada and Detroit, Michigan, where she has been visiting with friends and relatives since last December. PERSONALS . . | e A. BE. Winter, H. C, Johnson and George D. Owen spent yesterday at Powder river in the interests of the Midwestern Investment company. Mr. | Winter is the agent for the sale of the lots in the Powder River Townsite. Favorable conditions tending for immediate disposal of many blocks is the report brought back by the party. eee A party of surveyors, headed by Richard Kittle, are at Powder River jthis Week staking out corners for the Midwestern Investment company. ee \ Mrs, James Filbin and children are |coming here this Saturday evening |from Central City, Nebr., to join Mr. |Filbin who is with the Standard oil company, They will make their home in Casper. see Mr. and Mrs. Byron E. White have gone to their ranch at Tensleep to jsbend the summer. * A. C. Campbell is here from Chey- ienne, Wyo., on business for the next |few days. eee The Honorable and Mrs. Patrick Sul- livan have returned from a business and |pleasure trip spent in Denver, Colo- rado. Miss Margaret Sullivan and Miss Irma’ Patton will remain in Denver | Visiting with friends for a while longer. see |W. C. Tillotson is here on business | with the druggists, representing the |John Wyeth and brothers company of ; Philadelphia, Pa. es 8 Frank Halterman is here from Den- ver on business for the Upjohn com- pany of Detroit, Michigan. see Dr. R. A. Rathbun, veterinary sur- geon has just returned from Laramie where he has been in the interests of the Mills and Hutton company. oe 8 'T. C. Speers of the Mestas and Spears auditors offices here has left for Lusk, | Wyo., where he will attend to company busines for a few days. nee Mrv. Katherine Zelders is here Denver, Colo., from visiting with her sister, o. (Mr. and Mrs. Ralson Field are in the city from their home in Boulder, Colo., visiting with friends. ee Mrs. Louis A: Corbett and daughter have arrived from Virginia to spend the summer with Mr. Corbett who is in charge of the Corbett property since the murder of his brother John J. Cor bett, SOME OF THE STRIKING EARLY SUMMER FASHIONS SEEN ON FIFTH AVENUE RECENTLY Mr. Beleau was} the] | | } EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE OF THE DEMOCRATIC NATIONAL CONVENTION chairman; Mrs. 0. G. Villiers, Mrs. Stiles Burr, Mrs, Pattie Ruffner Jacobs. “MY WORD!” MONOCLES FOR WOMEN ARE HERE—A by Mrs. Geofry Taylor, beautiful wife of the aidede-camp to the governor of New wearing a monocle. The photo shows three New York girls watching a CASPER Y. W.G. A. oEEKS LOAN Ot FURNISHINGS FOR NEW QUARTERS LEASED ON EAST SECOND STREET Old Methodist Parsonage Being Remodeled for Use of ~ Organization; Worthy Purpose Expected to Draw Assistance and Recognition Here The old Methodist parsonage on East Second street, which was vacated this week when Rev. W. L. French and his family ;moved to their new home at 866 South Lincoln street, is being remodeled for the use of the Young Women’s Christian associa- tion, and the temporary headquarters committee, headed by Mrs. S. K. Loy, expects to have chairs and desks installed so that the Business and Professional Wo- men’s club may meet there Monday eve. ing desk, rockers and plain chairs, any ning: suitable living-room furniture, one mir- ‘As the ¥. W. C. A. will occupy the ror, one small table, drapery for win- parsonage for some six or eight months, |@ows, cups and six-inch plates. It been suggested that Mrs. Loy is securing furnishings for the various rooms which will make it attractive and homelike. In this con: nection, since furniture suited to the temporary home would probably be out of harmony with the Y. W. C. A. buile ing, it has been suggested that many Casper people would in all probability! A™y organizations desiring to take up| be willing to loan the association articles|S¥ch work nnd any individuals wishing of furniture from their homes, for the|t® help by loaning some of the articles | next six months. named should call Mrs, Loy, phon All such loans of furniture, etc.,| 897-R, s0 as to avoid duplication. would be carefully indexed and returned| Miss Bertha R. Miller, the town and to théjr owners in good shape when the|COUntry secretary from the Denver) Y. M. C. A. home is completed, Mrs. office, in charge of’ the organization states. | A partial list of the things needed in | cludes: Three cots with mattresses and springs, six pillows, two dressers, tw> BLESSINGS OF | POPE TO JAPAN pillow slips, bedding, ete., all of which can be used in the new building. Kitchen und dining equipment can also be used. Loy| TOKIO, (By ail).—Archibishop Petro! Fumasoni, who just arrived in Tokio, has conveyel the Pope's bles sing upon all Catholics here and ex consideration for the Japanese nation. He is the third envoy| sent to this county from the Vatican. | The first was Cardinal O'Connell, of Boston and the second Archbishop Pet Nrelli who presented the Emneror the Pope's congratulations upon his ac sion to the Throne. Achbishop Fumasoni will stay about three years in Japan and may remain permanently as Apostolic M'ent» if the) Japanese government e-t->7* to him| the recognition extended by civil govern-| ments, the Vatican being willing, it is said, to reciprocate by inviting a per- manent Japanese representative to the} Holy See. A few months ‘ago Captain) Yamamoto was sent to the Pope on an ofMicial mission from the Japanese gov-| ernment. The archbishop comes from India,| where he held the post of apostolic dele- gatefor the past few years. Referring | to the Catholic inhabitants of the Caro- lines and the Mariannes islands, who! have been without clergy since the Ger man missionaries were Archbishop Fumasoni said pressed his high that these of the archbishop of Sydney. | to right, Mrs. George Bass, Mrs. Howard Wilson( Mrs. Kellog Fairbank, Mr. Homer Cummings, Democratic national performance of | theater. They are, left to right, Miss Erica Mackay, Miss Irane Enright, Miss Arden Benlian. small rugs, two room size rugs, one writ-| { HOLDS MEETING IN CHICAGO—Left {JAPAN'S EXPORT TRADE {ing of branches and agencies of Jap- aneseé commercial concerns, together with a branch of the Yokahoma Specie Bank and a Japanese chamber of com- merce are noted. A considerable part of Japan's trade, it says, consists of typical Oriental pro- ducts, but much of it is in goods “which will with those of European WITH ARGENTINA ROSE BUENOS ATRES (By Mall).—Japan’s| Pure silk, silk cloth, cotton yarns, dyed export trade with Argentine rose from | fabrics, pencils, tin plate, china war $1,000,000 before the war to $10,000,000 |)copper wa buttons, brushes and in 1918, says the Fulletin of the United! fountain pens. States Chamber of Comme Establishment here of Japanese compete Kirk friend _— Jr. and Mrs. C. C. Casper today to visit rived in GARE R HEHE HHHHLHIEMLHLEHEAEEHNIA IA IAA AAA SAAS What Will You Loan the Y. W. 6. A.? Temporary Headquarters Committee of the Y. W. C. A., in furnishing quarters just leased on East Second street (old Methodist Parsonage), requests the LOAN of the following articles for six months: Three cots with pads and covers; 2 beds, mattresses and springs, 6 rugs; 1 writing desk; rockers and plain chai three-quarter size; 6 pillows; 2 dressers; 2 small rugs; room-size any suitable livingroom furniture; 1 mirror; 1 small table; drapery for windows; cups and 6- ation wus created at the opera house in London recently Zealand, who appeared in the royal box “Irene” at the Vanderbilt KANSAS SENATOR PRESENTS PROFITEERD FACTS TO CON- GRESS—U, S. Senator Arthur Capper whose presentation before congress of facts and figures in profiteering has stirred official Washington. work, arrived here Tuesday and is busy meeting with various committees and the association drive, The association is meeting with the heartiest support on every hand, a con- dition most gratifying to those inter ested. err———— GIFT TO THE FIRST LADY OF FRANCE—This hat, valued at $5,000, is the| repatriated, ' rift to Mme. Deschanel of 30,000 milliners of America, It has nine paradise fins! islands are now under tho jurisdiction | #24 @ crown of black lisere, the interior of which is made up of 48 pieces of silk, leach representing one of the states of the union. planning for the organization to precede| ” inch plates. All articles to be properly indexed with name of owner and given good care. MRS. S. K. LOY, Chairman. Phone 897R HHH HHH HEHEHE KE KEHNA KEKE AEA RRA STARTING SATURDAY ALL SMALL HATS FHL ERR EERE ERASER ERIE 25 Per Cent Discount on All LARGE SUMMER HATS Exclusive Agents Nu-Bone Corsets BURKETT MILLINERY 142 South Center Street : Big Reduction on All Millinery The Store of Quality “we CqQrat G WO Co- 141 East Second Street—I. O. O. F. Building Suits The high standard of quality of our suits and the workmanship and style is better known after you see them. We offer some to you priced in groups. : $37.50 to $39.50 $35.00 00 to 50. 2.50 $55.00 thts ieee | $57.50 peo $68.50 pee ier $80.00 th eal $95.00

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