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‘The musicale which was presented by the choir of the Pres! church under the direction of Prof. Rudolph Lundberg, at \the 8 last night was well attended by the 4 congregation of the church and mu- sic lovers of the city. The cantata “Gallia” was present- ed, with Mrs. J. W. Burns, so.oist, as well as other sacred selections sun; by H. L. Bottoms, soloist. Mrs, Burns and Mrs. P. W, Frank, ‘duet; and Mrs. Burns and chorus. Mrs. Edna Thomas was the accompanist. . . Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Cobb, Jr., en- tertained.in honor of Judge W. 8. Metz of Sheridan, at an informal din- ner served yesterday afternoon. Judge Metz has been visiting here for sev- eral days. He is a gentleman of some prominence in Sheridan. see Annual Musicale By Casper Woman’s Club. The Woman's club of Casper held ra their annual musicale on Saturday evening, March 19, at the home of Mrs, J. S. Mechling, on South Dur- bin street. Seventy-fiys gucsts and members enjoyed the ¢ ming of mu- sic and goodfellowship. The president, Mrs. J. W. Bingham, presided. As a prelude to the must. cale, she told of the aims and ideals of the club in the past. and of their hope for the future. The club as a whole,.and the club as individuals feel very much indebt- ed to the professional musicians who so kindly gave of their time and tal- ent to the enjoyment of all who were present. Those who took part were. Prof. Rudolph Lundberg, tenor: Mrs. Jes- sie Anderson Fowler, piano; Miss Mary Faulk, contralto; Miss Ruth Biggs, accompanist; Mrs. KF, J. Lesch- insky, contralto; Mr. H. L. Bottoms, tenor; Mrs. T. J. Riach, violin; Guy 'T. Morgan and Mr. Haus, pupils of the Gloria Dere Blake studio, accompan- ied by Gloria Dare Blake. Mrs. C. P. Brodie also added to the program with two interpretive dances, the Chopin Waltz and a Gavotte. After the program refreshments were served and a social time was spent. see ‘Meeting of Maccabees. ‘The Woman's Benefit association of the Maccabees will meet in regular session at the I. O. O. F. hall tonight at 8 o'clock. All Maccabees and vis- iting members are invited to be pres- ents oe ‘The meeting of the Wo-Ra-Lo class ef the Sunday school the Meth- odist church whith’ was"announced for this coming Tuesday” has been Postponed for two. weeks, . Synergae Meeting The meéting of St. Mirk's Syner- gae will be held Tuesday evening at the apartment of Mrs. C, P. Plum: mer in the Blackstone. cee Mr, and Mrs. M. N. Wheeler have left for Minneapolis and St. Paul, ‘Minn., where they will spend some time visiting with friends and attend- ing to Lae one tetris ‘Word has been received from Ma- or Ormsby and family who are now in Miami, Fla., that they intend leav- ing there April 1; They will drive north to Jacksonvile, Fia., where the three children will return to Casper! by train. Mr. and Mrs. Ormsby will sail to Baltimore, Md., so as to avoid the bad roads of Georgia and Tennes- see. They will then tour the eastern states and return by Niagara Falls, Cleveland and Chicago. eee Invitations Received for Paramount Club. The Paramount dancing club will entertain for the club members on Thursday evening, 80 announcements have been received, The dance will be held in the Winter Garden and-the Schembeck orchestrs will supply the music. Special features of si dancing will add to the evening's eitertainment and refreshments will ) served after 11 o'clock, % eee Studio Evening Is Nice Affair. The regular “Studio Evening” was a . enjoyed at the studio. of Gloria Dare | One of the new stu-, Blake, Sunday. dents giving an appreciated selection was Mrs. E. J. Hagarty. 7 ‘The study of musical and dramatic lays is being contintied with the idea of giving a production later in the cee Visitor From / Council Bluffs. et eg Miss Hazel Jardine of oCuncil Bluffs, Iowa, is a house guest at the home of} her brother, William. Jardine, and Charmine For Easter ‘ IN NEW ARRIVALS Direct from 5th Ave. ' Also ’ “COATS, SUITS, DRESSES Invitations have been issued by Mrs. Jardine for an informal evening of Pree bridge in honor oz iiss Jar- 1e. oy - eee 43 Announced of Contest ‘The silver medal oratorical contest given under the auspices of the W. C. T. U. will be held at the Presbyter- jan Tabernacle on Wednesday. even- ing, March 23. ‘The following: program will be pre- sented by the contestants and mém- bers of. the organiation. Musical Selection >, “Mammy's Song,’ -.. Mrs. P, W. Frank 3. Civilization Gates and L. Accompanist . -. Prof. Rudolpr ‘Lundberg Contestant No. 5, “Let Us Make Our Victory Truly Secure.” Reading, ‘The Abandoned’ Bio}- ment —- : Elizabeth” Baker Presentation of ‘Mfedal Song, ‘‘America," --- By Audience iy 2 oe Surprise Party \ Is Enjoyed . Sundwell. A surprise party in honor of Mr. and Mrs. John Peter was given at their home, 945 South Spruce street, last Saturday night. The evening was spent playing games,and dancing. A delicious lunch- eon- was served at 11 o'clock. ‘The guests included the Messrs. and Mesdames Werner and son, Dr. Palm- ular,Edmund Siebers and family, Savage, Mrs. Burke, Mrs. Hayes and Mr, Tucher. : Moose to Be Hosts Tonight, y ‘The members of the Moose lodge will be hosts this evening at a public dance held in the Winter Garden. The spe- cial entertainment of the evening +!!! be the songs by Rex Mayne and Rhue GilL_and the exhibition dancing Ov Professor MacFarland and Miss Jay Bickford. ‘The Moose lodge plans to give a Public dance three times a month and a@yprviate, dance for the members of attacked and slain within a few feet of her home by a negro who ‘has, confessed to the brutal’ crime. i TOMORROW Millinery once a month. public dances are building fund. berg, assisted by his pupils. se 8 fs Saturday Night Dance - . Is Well Attended. The dance given last Saturday: night in the temple auditorium by Mrs. Sam’ Service, assisted by a committee, was well-attended as usual. The Misses Ethel and Marion Mann interpreted several dances, in. costume, receiving’ much applause. The music was played by the Casper band orchestra, which has gained in popularity since its re- organization several months ago. cee J. W. Burkett has returned from Rochester, Minn., where he has been the organization and their’ famiiles! The with his wife, who recently underwent Dally. Ceidune CHAMBER OF COMMERCE DRIVE ‘MEMBERS SET FOR APRIL-11 ing the made from the old location in the Oil Exchange building Saturday. after- noon eee J.'M. Ferris, former captain of po- lice-hers who was summoned from Cheycnno to testify in criminal cases in: the dintrict court will leave for the capital city this evening. After clos: @ serious ‘operation. Mrs. Burkett 18 ing up his “affairs there he and his reported to be much better and she and her two daughters, Mrs. William Weaver and Miss Charlotte Burkett, will return here within the next week or 80, see Mrs.'G, L. Kay of Denver, Colo., ar- rived Sunday. to spend several weeks here visiting with friends. Mrs. Kay formerly lived in Casper and has many friends heve and in Salt Creek. PERSONALS _ Mr. and Mrs. Hugh ®. Miler, ac- companied by Mrs. Ji Baird haye r¢- turned from a visit in Denver. They made the return trip overland in, 12 hours in their new AVillys-Knight m tor car, ~ eee : Mr..and Mra. H. H. Schwartz. are in Washington, D. C., where Attorney Schwartz is attending to legal mat- ters. ~ anny E. D. Holmes has' lett’ for Fort Col- lins, Colo., where he will address. the Chamber of Commerce. eee 0, C, Brunsvold is in Washington, D. C., looking after gil. matters. eee : J. W. McKim, president of the. Cow Gulch Ol! cbmpany, is in New Mex- ico attending to business matters. eee Mr. and Mrs, Sam Corson of Chey- enne, are spending a few days:in the city visiting with their. son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Wil- liam Corson.” oe Ex-Governor B, B. Brooks has re- turied from, Basin, Wyo. eee Attorney A, E. Stirrett ia in Wayh: ington, D.°C., looking after busitess interests. 5 ee srs R. J; Mosher has returned to, the city from Oklahoma; Where2/6) has been looking after ollmatters. “+ eee __B. By Brooks, W.-O. ‘Wilson’ and C. H. Townsend have returned. from Greybull where they sttepded the spring meeting of the’ Pig. Horn Basin consistory, The Casper men were the principal speakers atthe affair. see Al Park, county engineer, left this morning for his ranch in the Bates Hole country. J4e will return here the latter part he tho wae, . ‘The Western States Oil and Land company is now located in its new offices in the Midwest building, hav- Attention Mothers and Fathers! Robust and ys and girls—the resull of this wondel ceey Predacng food ; RE is a statement by an au- family will feturn to Casper to make their permanent home. ‘Mrs. Verne Lockhart joined her hus band this morning after an extend: ed visit with relatives in Dallas, Tex., and other southern points. eee Miss Janice Hufsmith/is leaving to- day for Boulder, Colo., where she is a student at the niversity of Colorado. PAGE THREE i E ty to put drives caused the directors.of i F ‘Chamber of Commerce to optimistic- ally Tas successful fesults. Industrial Newsi eooccevesoccces o STANIYARD REFINERY NOTES Alfred) M. Schurig of the common labor department has been called out of town for several days owing to the illness of his brother. Jehn Templeton, employee of the welding department has returned from a trip to his homestead and reports everything as coming on very nively lia the country. j pet { Harry L, Young, formerly employed by the C. B. & Q. railroad, has been assigned to the mason department. Miss Hufsmith attended” the wedding | Lindsay Burbridgeof Denver, Colo., of her sister, formerly Miss Ava fese%, smith, to M. P, Wear, which (took place last week. . ow ee Attorney Floyd E. Pendel, is at- tending to business matters’in Kan- sag City, Mo., for the next few days. ‘eee Dick Huff is‘returning (0 Boulder, Colo., today where he is attending the state university. eee P, C.: Nicolaysen of the Nicolaysen Lumber company, ani one of thé di- rectors of the Casper National bank, attending to’ blisinéss ‘interests in Riverton and Shyshohi for a few days. eee _Stacey Boyer is returning today to the University of Colorado in Boul- der after ’yisitmg in the city over the week-end. eee Mr.-and Mrs, F. D. Jones of’ Glen- rock ‘are ‘spending "a few days here visiting with’ friends. ‘ see “R. M, Bartholoniew is expected to return, today ftom Denver where he has been attending ta ‘business mat- ‘ters, ae CLEMENCEAU RETURNS, TOULON, France, March ~21— Georges Cleménceau, former premier ot- France, arrived here today from India, where he has been engaged in huting tigers and in visiting’ the foot- hills of the Himalaya mountains. He reported upon landing from the steam- er Ormonde that he was in. perfect heaith. * has arrived in this city and bas been assigned to the pipe department as a fitter. M. D. Paul, employed'for some time as chief clerk for the, Northwestern Oil company, has'accepted a position in the accounting department) at the main office. Everybody who had an opportunity took a trip to the country yesterday. From all accounts the Alcova road is in fine condition and the scenery is much better than the Yellowstone or Salt Creek routes. This probably ac- counts for the great number of cars traveling this road at the present time. A number of the boys including :C. Warnock of the carpenter department and Morris (Shorty) HEdelmuth are counting the days from now until the first of next month when the fishing season opens. We- understand that their Sunday address from that time on will be “somewhere on the Sweet- water.” ia nba Naab NEW COAL. PROJECT. The great ‘government _{rrigation project onthe ceded. portion of the Indian reservation in Fremont, coun- ty -will expend in construction this year more than one million dollars| and it is expected that the first unit of 60,000 acres, lying along Big Wind| river, will be. placed upon the mnrket in. 1922, principally in tracts. of .40 sought. for by eastern farmers, . In the. midst of this area is 120 acres ,of deeded land under which lays five or more veins. of coal.tn qual- Winter Garden “Bostrot Contest for: the Championship of, Kaspar “+ 10c Publik Dance _ Tuesday Your ERO REY EDEN ES Protection to 80 acres each, and is being eagerly | ity higher than any other thus far found in Wyoming. These coal veins are three to, six feet: thick and dip at an angleof about 30 per cent. Owner has been operating this mine in a crude way for several years but ‘heretofore there has been limited market. It is down about 300 {eet on on Sales last winter were $4,200. "This fall and winter, and for future years there will be reacy sale for all that can be taken out. The main ditch of this irrigation Project crosses the. property and the price asked for the land is not an ex- travagunt prive for farm property. Price $200 per. acre. ‘Thirty, miles from Lander, Wyo. This 1s an oppotunity for big busi- ness.) ‘For further information see JOHN M. ENGLAND CO. 202 O-S Bids. Office photie 1129, home phone 543-J. 38 —Aav. River Traffic Is Resumed Today CINCINNATI, O., March 21.— The steamer Queen City began its second voyage to\New Orleans today in the ¢ffort to. revive traffic on the Ohio and Mississippi rivers. 5 The trip is notable because aboard her is a large shipment of pianos, music boxes, soap, etc., from this city to. Pacific coast cities, the first time that Cincinnati made goods have been shipped ta California by water. At-New. Oleans the freight will be transferred to an ocean-going vessel which will be routed through tho Panama Ctnal. River men say that despite the length of the voyage the freight rate will be less than that by the raflroad. a RAIL WORKERS TALK STRIKE NEW YORK, March 21.—The east- ern federation of the Brotherhood of ‘and Steamship Clerks, Freight Handlers, Express and: Sta- tion Employes, today sent a resolution to E. H. Fitzgerald, grand president of the brotherhood, urging him to au- thorize a‘feferendum strike ballot for immediaté-use should the railways de- cline to obey the mandates of the transportation act of 1920 before re- ducing wages. —_——_ PIANO AND PLAYER PIANO’ FOR SALE Have on hand good used piano, high grade; also player piano, like new; will sell both at a bargain. Call evenings at Henning Hotel, room 245. *irs. E Henderson. 3. A. E. Reynolds Pioneer Mining Man, Is Called DENVER, Colo., March 21.—A. B. Reynolds, 82 years of age, pioneer mining man, rancher and ¢rustee of the University of Denver, died early tolay at the home of his daughter, Mrs. Badish P. Morse, in Nashville, Tenn., according to word received here. Mr. Reynolds has been suffering from heart disease since early last month and went to Nashville to get to a lower altitude. Death was due to apoplexy. A brother, Charles F. Reynoids, lives near Boulder. Mr. Reynolds came west in his early twenties, establishing himself first at Fort Leavenworth, Kan., as an Indian post trader. In 1874 he laid out a mining claim near Lake City, Colo., and ten years later made his home in Denver. He held extensive mining interests and owned ranch property near La Junta, Colo., and in Texas. SUCCESSOR T0 LAW ELECTED LONDON, March 21.—¢®y the Asso- ciated Press)—Austen Chamberlain, chancellor of the exchequer, was to- ay elected leader of the Unionist party in the house of commons. His selec- tion, effected at a meeting of the Unionist members of the House of Commons at the Chariton club, was| unanimous. He succeeds Andrew| Bonar Law, whose retirement becaure of ill health was announced last week. | > RIVAL TOWNS COMBINE ABNNST COMMON FOE BIG PINEY, Wyo., March 21.— After years of rivalry the owners and residents of the rival townsites of Big Piney and Marbleton, which adjoin, have composed their differences and united against a common rival—Pine- dale. ‘The development is the result of authorization for the organization of the new county of Sublette. Big Piney and Pinedale are rivals for lection as the county seat, and the Marbletonians have consented to mer. ger with Big Piney in order to assist the latter. ——-—»—---- TRIBUNE CLASSIFIED ADS 4t "BRING RESULTS. ! In the Bank he can ‘A Plain Fact that every man must face— whether he likes it or not— is that if he must depend for a living upon the money which he personally is able to earn he must also depend for his future needs upon what he is able to SAVE. Casper National sums from a dollar up, this bank’s Saving Department paying 4 per cent per annum on small or large deposits, “Thirty-two years of service —may we serve you?” PRODUCTION OF COTTON SnOWs GAIN FOR 1920 Last Year’s Crop Largest Since 1914 and Sixth Largest in History of Industry, Is Report WASHINGTON, March 21.—The largest cotton crop since 1914 and the sixth largest in the history of the country was grown last year. Ginning statistics for the 192081 season announced today by the cen- sus bureau show a total of 13,365,754 equivalent 500-pound bales comprise the 1920 crop. ‘That is about 2,769,000 eqyivalent 500-pound bales less than the record crop of 1914. ‘The census bureau's figures of cotton actually ginned, which are accepted as the final pros on statistics, show the crop, to be 4 bales more than estimated by the department of ag- riculture Iast December in its final forecast of the year. ARTE AOE U, P, CUTS FORCES AGAIN OMAHA, Neb., March 21,—An ad- ditional cut in the shop forces em- ployed by the Union Pacific here was announced today bringing the total number of shop members down to 1,- 200 as-compared to 1,700 befwre the road started to make reducitions. EUREKA POLISH Best for Autosand Furniture Made in Casper deposit any WAY, VEOGRIIRA The Stata-Bleck Ce, 1920 You Want Stylish Clothes You Want Quality You Want Satis- faction If you don't get it in -limit is thirty-minutes. TESTE NOTICE After March 10 the ordinance concerning ; sparking on Center street from Midwest avenue to “AN street. and on Second street from David to Wolcott streets will be rigidly enforced. Time ‘~» At intersection of Center and Second no car ‘will’ be allowed: to make a complete tum during the’afternoon from 12 m. to 6 p. m. J. E. LYNCH, Chief of Police. Stein-Bloch Clothes— money back. Truly America’s finest tailored clothes. White Oxford and Pongee Shirts, but- toned-down collar, the latest thing in shirts for the good dresser, $3.25. Mednick Bros, Next to the America Theater The Store for Men Who Seek Indi- viduality WE'RE ALL GOING TO “THE DEVIL” “TOMORROW ¥