Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, September 30, 1920, Page 3

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Mr. and Mrs. McMahon - } Return from the East. Sir. and Mrs. L. F. McMahon have returned from the East, Where — they spent about @ month visiting different cities. Mr. McMahon attended a meet- ing of the Glenrock Oil company while be was in Richmond, Va., and reports a large attendance at the meeting where important business was” trans- acted. 3 Mrs. Edward Hostess at Dinner Party, Mrs. Philip K. Edwards will enter- tain at dinner this evening in honer of Mrs. James Paige of Minneapolis, and Dr. Grace Hebard of Lara- *-* Picnic Meeting Is Great Success. Mrs. J. N. Speas held open house at her ranch home yesterday for the mem- bers of the Senior Philathea class of the Methodist Sunday ‘schdol. The party left the church yesterday morn- ing at 10 o'clock in seven motor cars. They found the roads in fine conditioa and made the trip to the ranch in a short time. .\bout fifty members of the class and chfidren were the guests of Mrs. Speas. . The dinner was served in cafeteria style and was eaten out on the lawn nnder the trees. Bach of the guests had some appointed duty to perform in preparing the meal. A delicious feast ef fried chicken, ripe tomatoes, sand- wiches, home-made ice cream and cakes was served. The afternoon was spent as a ken- sington and about 5, o'clock the party left the ranch for their homes in the city. ses Snyder-Lewis Wedding Performed in Denver. The Rev. H. W. Smith of Denver, united H. C. Snyder and. Miss Delpha Pearl Lewis, both pt Casper, in. mar: riage or September 20, in the parlors of apartments. Mr. Snyder is the som of J. H. Snyder Kansas ity, Mo., and Miss Lewts is the daugh- of Mr. and Mrs. Dariel Lewis of this eity, After the ceremony, Mr. and Mrs. Snyder left for the Wast, where they will visit with friends and relatives un- til after the first of next month, Thi will then return here and be at home in their new bungalow in North Bur- lington addition, Befere ¢oming to Casper Mr. Snyvier was employed as an accountant in one of the leading trust companies in Ka: s City. He also saw 18 months ser" ice overseas. “After receiving his dis- charge on deecount of kis health, he came to Casper and accepted a position with the €., B. & Q. railroad. Mrs. Snyder has been spending most of her time for the past two years. in Cheyenne, She is anartist, and also Dossesses’ @& beautiful contralto voie2. She took am active part in all musical entertainments in Cheyenne and was popular fi society circles. RegAswc 55@. Mullin Opens Dancing The first informal dancing party of the season. will be given at the Mul- lin cltfh text Tuesday evening, Octo” ber 6. Over thirty invitations are be- ing sent out. 2 The dance will be informal and the Leffingwet orchestra will furnish the musi¢.. The committee in charge pf the dance is composed of J. A. Leary, De. T. J: Drew, C. P. Brodie, Prank Mur- phy and E. J. Donahue. Last winter the informal dancing parties iin club were much enjoyed by a number of the young pea: ple here and they look forward an- other entertaiiing season. © b, 9 te ee Carr-MacGilt Ni ; Performed This | “ The home of Mrs. J. D: Distruke; 422 South Beech street, was the stdne of a pretty wedding ceremany, when Miss Leona Carroll MacGii. and John Ernest Carr were united i marriage this morning at 7:30 o'clock. Rey, C. M. Thompson, Jr., pastor of the First Ba) tist church, performed the ceremon: Only the most intimate friends of the young couple and relatives were pres- ent, ¢ ‘The bride were a smart traveling suit and hat with a corsage bouquet of bride's roses. . TImmediately after tne services the bride and groom stole a march on their friends and left om the morning train for Sheridan, Wyo., where they wi'l spend about a week. They will return here to live, Mrs. Carr fs the niece of Mrs. Dix- muke and has lived im Casper for some time. She spent last winter attending school in Chicago. Mr. Carr is one of the proprietors of the B. & ©. grocery company. "PERSONALS | ia oO Wilson Kimball, Jr., is in St, Louis, Mo., attending the national convention of Rexall dealers. Mr. Kimball is own- er ef the Kimbali Drug company her, the only dealer in the city in Rexall goods. He is the only representative from the state of Wyoming at the con- vention. ess J. H. Backmeier is spending several lays in the city from Cincinnati atten1- ing to business. ee Mr. and»Mrs. George Tammany are speuding the week in the city from their home in Kansas City, Mo., look- img after business matters and visiting with friends, ; . * Miss Helen: Crater will resume bry position with the Northwestern rati- road tomorrow after spending a month’s vacation visiting with rela- tives in the Wast. * * Mr. and Mrs. William Weaver have left for the oil fields at Rawjins and Laramie, Wyoming. Mr. aver is president of. the Weaver Rig Building sompany and ‘will attend to business matters while there, Théy are. making the trip overland in their motor cir and expect to return the last of the week. se © Dr. R. T. Hobson of the Casper phar- macy, and party are leaving tomorrow for the Dubeis country on ani elk hunt. The same party spent a week in that country, last year and were very suc: cessful. ~ They expect to give the anf- lers of their elk to the. collection be- ing gathered by the Casper pharmacy. sae A. R. Thorson is here from Denver attending to business for the next fow days. se William Haselmire has returned from Omaha, where he spent a week's va- cation at his home. On his return he yisited for a few days in Cheyenne ang Denyer. He will resume his position with the Casper National bank. “© .8 R. C. Logan of Pittsburgh, Pa., is here’ in the city looking after off in- terests. Mr, Logan is representing Noah Williams of Los Angeles, Cal : i | Your Choice Stl 45 Dresses Regularly Priced Up to $42.50 919.95 New Millinery Arriving Daily TRUCKS Payments Have a four months’ contract that will make about _ $80 per day per truck. "Will sell fracks for same on a Ce JAIN Henning Hotel one of the large stockholders of the lowa-Wyoming Oi} company. Mr. Lo. gan was taken on a trip of inspection of the fields yesterday, and is most er- thusiastic. He has inspected all of the large eastern flelds. Hie states that the Boitoa Creek fields are among tlie most promising has ever seen. se 6 H. A. Burke has the contract for re- modeling the heating plant in the Grude apartments. He will start the work today and will put in a modern | i heating system. ses H. & Gooch of Denver, is spending 4% few days in the city looking after ymportant business interests. ‘ eee Mr. and Mrs. Ray Phoebus cf Ther- mopolis, are visiting here at the home of Dr. ana Mrs. S. T. Butler for a few days. They are interested in the growth of Casper since their last visit ++ Mr. and Mrs. F. Philip of Lost Cabin, Wyo., are spending a few days here on business and visiting with friends. eee Mr. and Mrs. Edward Keating are the parents of a baby boy born yes- terday. The mother and son are get- ting along nicely. a) F. P. Craig is in the city from Chey- enne looking after business matters for the next few days. FP. L. Purcel of Denver is registered at the Tienning hotel while looking aft- er business interests. *. G. E. Brimmer arrived this morning from Cheyenne, and is spending th day here attending to business matters. 28 Don Berry§ western representative for the Metro Film Company, is in the city for a few days on business and pleasure. He is @ guest at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Brennan, «ee » Mark U, Weber, treasurer of the Chappell Of! Company, will return Monday from Bartlesville, Okla., where he ness for the past several weeks, see Gus Hardendorf is expected to arrive here this ‘weeljend from Iowa and Kansas, where he has been on an ex- tended business trip in the interests of the San Juan Oil Corporation. ee Miss” Marie Bogan has accepted a position in the office of the Midwest Refining Company. ee Miss Florence Johnson left this after-| noon for Rochester, Minn., where she} will reeeive medical attention at pa Mayo ‘Bros. Sanitarium. Attorney Floyd B. Pendell will arrive here ever the week-end, after spending last week in Denver, where he under- rent a slight operation. eee J. B. Barnes has returned to his office in the Oil Exchange building after spending yesterday in Douglas on busi- has been attending to company busi-| of J. B. Barnes} {work of Mrs. Pred Wyckoff of Ther-' mopolis, who was a close personal t ' 1 | iton of Greybull, head of the depart-| ment of public health, which oecurred) last spring. Following her address Mrs. Noble was presented with a bouquet of red/ roses by the members of the Ther- |mopolis delegation. ! Wednesday Afternoon. response to such a welcome will be; Reports on conservation of {made if every delegate gets from the}food, forestry and good roads, and soils meeting all the inspiration which is! given yesterday afternoon, showed that possible to take back to her, home. | Progress im all these directions is being ;_ In her address as president, Mrs.|made in the state. and that the club }Lin I. Noble of Thermopolis echoed/women are taking their full share. this sentiment when, after extending! Mrs. W.C. Mentzer of Cheyenne gave greeting to all present, she said. ® most interesting report of the ses- “I hope you will all receive from the}sions of the biennial convention of the seventeenth convention of the federa-}National Federation of Women’s Clubs tion all for which you came and more.” held at Des Moines last June, at which Mrs. Noble's address was well writ-|the Wyoming federation was represent- ten and given with an earnestness such|ed by a delegation of fourteen women. as has marked all her work as fed-| She mentioned particularily, the fact! jeration president. [that Wyoming had supported Mrs. She outlined the progress being} Winter of Minneapolis, who was eleet- made by the clubs of the state in their}ed to the presidency, and that the efforts along lines of civil service, art,{delegation had also supported a pian literaure, polities, conservation of re-|to reorganize the natJonal federation so sources, public .health, ete., and urged more earnest endeavor jin ‘each de- partment. She enlled attention to the work of| the legisitive committee, which will] back bills calling for eight months of school in country as well as city dis- tricts, and for the payment of tuition hy the county when high schoo! pupils! }must be transferred from one county | to another. | Library extension is a_ particularly {important part of the work of the club woman, Mrs. Noble asserted. | The educational loan fund, which jenables girls to complete their educa- jtions is also one of the most worthy; works dene by the state federation. friend as well as her co-worker as a} { federation officér. Mention was also! made of the death of Dr. Bertha Ham- (Continued trom Page 1) birds, | shall be limited. The national federation 14 growing so large that it is unweiléy, she explained. Clubs can send delegates by belonging to the national federation, whether they belong to state federations or not. The new plan, which will be con- sidered again at the next biennial, would stress membership in the state federation, jwhich would district the state, one delegate from each district being, allowed. The numerous social affairs of the biennial were deseribed, many of them in a humorous vein, Mrs. E. C. Raymond of -Newcastle also gave an interesting report of .a part of the general federation sessions. Dr. Anna Howard Shaw Memorial. Among the interesting matters pre- sented to, the .convention yesterday She urged that every club woman jendeavor to carry out the spirit of the} | resolutions which will be adopted by this convention. A plan for finaneing the federation so that it may have an endowment |rund of at least $5,000, the interest of which shall pay the president’s ex- 'penses to the biennial one year and| jenable her to visit the elubs of the | state the next year of her term, was} also urged by Mrs. Noble. She paid a touching tribute to the Diamonds at the right price at a dependable store JOS. I. SCHWARTZ Iris. Theater Bldg. E. Keating, Mer. ' Home demonstrations ate*made with the positive under- standing that you are under no obligation Did You THAT the materials in the Crystal are the very best that money can buy? . THAT its the ma THAT it washes everything from the finest laces to the bulkiest articles, such as quilts and carpets? THAT EASY TIME PAYMENTS CHAMBERLIN F URNITURE CO. | that the representation of each state! + afternoon was the Dr. Anna Howard! Shew Memorial fund. Mrs. ‘Tolliver,| the state chairman, is endeavoring to} rais® $500 for the fund, $25 being ap-| portioned to each county. Several) counties have paid their assessment and all are responding, she, said: Dr. Hebard told of the life of Dr.} Shaw, who was a pioneer tor women) in the pulpit and in medicine as welll» jrief illness. as in politics. As chairman of the) The body was shipped to Clay Cen- Woman's ional Council of Defense,| ter, this afternoon, the mother Dr. Shaw laid down her life in the/ and father accompanying it, and burtal great war as truly as any boy im the/ will be made at that place. trenches, her death resulting from pneumonia whilg she was — putting! # f For Your Hair across a Liberty loan drive. { medicine at the University of ‘Pennsy enw a bald eas Frerads Soe perfumed gt ° RANCHERS LOSE LITTLE. “GIRL IN DEATH HERE Mary Elizabeth Borland, 8-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ray Borland of the Stroud ranch, east of the clty, died at a local hospital last night after scholarship in political science and) government at Bryn Mawr and in} The memoria will be a tund of sev-| eral million dollars, which will endow! vanin for girl students of these sub-| Pts ey ‘ezeu they used i fects. | other ingredients ‘frost hela Saas 4 In some parts of West Africa the | girls have long engagements. On tie! day of their birth they are betrothed to a baby boy a trifle older than them | and at the age ‘of twenty they | are married. The girls know of no| other way of getting a husband, anc) the e quite happy and satisfled. | frente Bhow others, Giller or stamps) for proof Dox and gosrantee, to J.hm Hart Brittata, Stu, F, New York Many housewives will order mayon- naise at the restau- rant but not make it at home. Why? FROBABLY because many still have the idea that mayonnaise is lots of trouble to prepare. Or that they cannot make good mayonnaise—or that it won’t “keep.” None of these reasons keeps the woman who knows Mazola_ from making her own mayonnaise eve: week, =— Mazola being an absolutely pure vegetable oil, blends the ingredients perfectly and imparts its own delicate flavor to the dressing—which will keep for weeks without separating. Once you try Mazola you will prefer it to olive oil. It not only equals the finest imported olive oil, but costs about half the price. Mazola‘is served by leading hotels, clubs and dining cars throughout America. CORN PRODUCTS REFINING! COMPANY “ 17 Battery Place, New York ‘The new handsomely illustrated Corn Prod- FREE wets Cook Book contains 64 of prac+ © cooks. —write cal and tested reci, by day. Cor oducts Re Company, P,O. Box today. Corn Products 161, New York City. MAYONNAISE 1 teaspoon of Salt % 2 tablespoons each of Lemon Juice” and Vinegar or Vinegar 2 Eggs, Yatks only 1 Pint of Mazola 1 teaspoon. fasta: 1 dash of Cayenne or White Pep- 4 tablespoons of (any ie per or! teaspoon Paprika flavored vinegar may be used) Have all ingredients and niixing utensils cold. Mix sey jients. Add egg yolls and when well mixed, add 15 teaspoonful of vinegar. Add Mazola drop by drop until the mixture ins to thicken, beating slowly. As soon as the mixture thickens, add the remainder of the vinegar a little at a time. Now beat in the remainder of the Mazola gradually antil all is used. The Mayonnaise be thick enough to hold its shape: Put in a glass jar and cover close. Place im the ice box to be used when needed. It will keep for weeks. Do not stir it when you open it; take out as much as you need with a tablespoon and a jar. wl VOUSTRIES:= Know-- design is far in advance of, anything else on rket today? it will last you a life time? Saturday, October 2, at Masonic Temple Everybody cordially invited. Dancing from 9 to 12. Tickets $1.00,War Tax 10c Ladies Free POSS OOO 9519 OC4 Burkett Millinery 146 South Center Exclusive Agents NU BONE AND BARCLAY CORSETS Electric Washer & Wringer The best corsets on the market, and the only made-to- measure corset with both back kand front lace to suit the type of figure. ARRIVING DAILY

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