Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, October 15, 1921, Page 8

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Whom the heart of man shut out, Sometimes tho heart of God takes tn, And fences them all round about With silence ‘mid the world’s loud din. JAMES RUSSELL LOWELL. State Convention at Greybull Demands That Yellowstone Be Protected—Urges Observance of December 10 as “Wyoming Day’”—Mrs. Lin I. Noble Re-elected President The eighteenth annual convention of the Wyoming Feder- ation of Women’s clubs, with 100 clubwomen of the state in attendance, was held at Greybull October 4, 5,6 and 7. The visitors were given a royal welcome by Greybull citizens, be- ing welcomed in speeches by Mayor McMillan on behalf of the city, and by Miss Elizabeth Wiley in behalf of the clubs. Mrs. E. Richard Shipp of Casper gave | is custodian. At the first general sub the response for the delegate: scription over $700 was raised, $200 The first meeting Tuesday evening | of which was donated by the men.of was characterized by an informal re-|Greybull. At @ later passing of the ception, and general suggestions for | hi the fund was swelled to a figure club improvement outlined iff a speech by the federation director, Mrs. Lin I. Noble of Thermopolis. The outstanding features of the whole convention lay in the splendid} ‘Resolutions adopted by addresses given by people specially | tzation follow in briei: fitted to descourse intelligently on| “1. Whereas, the club women at this their respective subjects. eighteenth annual convention of the James R. Coxen of the state depart-| General Federation of Women's clubs ment of education delivered.an ad-| of Wyoming, favor conservation of the Gress designed to explain the alms|assets of the state both useful and of his department and to clearly set| beautiful. Be it resolved; forth its purpose as a distinct factor} ‘That, we protest against the com- in industrial relationship. He said|mercializing of the resources of Yel that the rehabilitation of vocational |jowstone park that in any way would traning should not be confused with| mar the grandeur of the park. considerably over a $1,000. is used in the form of loans to needy young people endeavoring to obtain a college education. the organ- the compensation act, for it is a move- 2. -Whereas the study of Wyo- ment to train men and women in-j ming history Inakes for good cit! jured during the war in industrial oc-|zenship. Be it resolved: cupations to earn thetr livelihoods in| ‘That December 10, 1921, be set honorable positions free from the/aside as Wyoming day, and phat chil handicap of their injuries. There has/dren ghould be made to study Wyo- been considerable difficulty in reach |ing hist ory. ing those who might bo benefitted in| 3. Resolved, that a home be built this way, because ‘they mistake the/for the delinquent girls of Wyoming department's purpose, the speaker/as soon as the number demands such said. protection and care. An exceedingly interesting illustrat-| 4. Resolved, that we endorse the ed lecture was given by Miss Kather-| protection of the wool industry. | ine Bennett of Laramie, a home eco-} 6. In this resolution we wish to nomics extension worker. During the] express our appreciation of the cour- course of the lecture she made a com-|tesy and entertainment of the Grey- plete dress, beginning from the proper | bul! men and women toward the Wyo-| laying of the pattern upon the goods|ming Women’s Federation of cluba, | to the final button-hole. December 10, the date recommended | Lewis C. Tidball, state commissioner | f0r the observance of Wyoming day, of education, reviewed the “School | * the anniversary of the signing of Bituation in Wyoming.” He gave a|the bill giving the vote to Wyoming clear direct-from-the-shoulder talk,| Women, the pioneer equal suffrage! and brought out the acute housing |W in the United States, situation prevalent tn most of the Mrs. Lin I, Noble was re-elected | towns of the state, Although a cer-|President of the federation; Mra. YW. | tain financial depression is evident, he} V- Gage of Worland, vice president; | said, it Is not alarming, and Wyo-|Mrs. Albert Rochelle of Lusk, record- ming schools exe ‘ble to those| ins secretary; Mrs. C. F, Stewart of of the rest of tls stat every re-|Thermopolis, corresponding secretary; spect/ . Miss lizabeth Wiley of Greybuil, ‘A regrettable incident occurred | treasurer and Mrs. G. F, Hamilton, when a telegram sent by Dr. Wheeler |°f Sheridan, aduitor. of the national forestry department }'. Election of the’ delegates for the failed to arrive. He had prepared an| biennial convention of the National hour's talk on forest conservation, 1I-| Federation of Women's clubs resulted lustrated with lantern slides. In thej1" the choice of Mrs. B. B, Brooks of absence of definite knowledge as to his| C@sper, chairman; Mrs. T. S. Talla- appearing before the convention his| ferro, Rock Springs; Mra. 8. W. Dow- place on the program had been filled|®°¥, Laramio; Mrs. ..G. Raymond, and it was possible therefore for him |NeWcastle and Mrs. W. H. Hamilton, to make only a very short talk on|°f Evanston. Friday morning. Fires built by care-|, 4 banquet was served to the visl- less tourists were a meniice, he deciar-| tors Thursday night, Mrs. Grace A. ed. He suggested a tourist camp clean-| Spencer as toastmistress capably filled up campaign. Dr. Wheeler advocated | ‘hat difficult position. that every state be its own timber} . The next convention of the federa- supply and that there be co-openation | tion will be held at Torrington at a by every town in tho planting wof| date to be decided later. ag at bees trees. : Interesting three-minute reports Advertising That Didn’t Pay. were made by every club secretary, but perhaps the most significant was that of the educational lodn fund for which Mrs. B. B, Brooks of Casper He had an infectious laugh. But he began to notice it and talk about 1 himself and then nobody paid any more attention to it. English Brownies, an Organization For Tots Under Ten, Being Duplicated Here Little English Brownie saluting Mrs, Jane Deeter Rippin, national direc tor of the Girl Scouts. ‘3 The Brownies are coming to Amer. iat jthe little Brownies gathered in fairy ings and had their fun, too. Who are the Brownles? ‘They are] eet eat eee. Pantin 3 2) the little sisters of the Girl Guides in| rreasure hunts taught them all about England. A long time ago when Lady|the flowers and stones and grasses Baden-Powell organized the Girl| that they found, and thelr gameu were Guides, who are like our Girl Bcouts| designed to give exercise to every here, she discovered that very many |muscle in the Browntes sturdy bodies. of the girls who wanted xo join could) When Mrs. Jane Deoter Rippin, the not because they had \o ‘take care of| national director of the Girl couts, their small sisters. So all the little|was in England-this xummer, she liked girls under ten were formed in “packs'|the Brownie. program *o much that of twomy-four. They were given|she brought it home with her, Al- Brownie caps to wear, nnd iater,|ready there are $00 American Brown Brownie uniforms, ‘Then v a big} fes lke the ttle Engitsh Brownte who Brown Owl om fender and with the!ere giving Mrs. Rippin Girl Guides taking turns as helpers! salute In this picture, the Brownle ? ee Datntandsinaiees Lnieietianenaninmemeonts LOE ES SEL RY FST aS SE ERI Social Glub ‘The fund | Club Women of Wyoming Protest Against Commercializing National Park Resources Venice Is Not Onl City Where Kiddies Take Boat to School REDGEFIELD, Wash., Oct. 14. —Going to school is not without its Joys to the children living along Lake river, near here, for each Gay they go and return home by boat. The school district employ: two “kid boats,” gasoline launches, as well as a “kid truck,” automo- bile, to convey the children. A high school student operates one of the launches on Lake river }] and makes round trips dally be- || tween the municipal wharf and a |] ranch two rallies south. The oiher launch runs from the city dock to the head of Bachelor Island slough and the mouth of Lake riyer, about ten miles. Bungalow Now Built on Roof Of Skyscraper Tops of~Tall Buildings in New York Financial District Become Front Yards for Sumptious Homes of Business Men 2 When the rush of the day ts over and they heed for home, New ‘{‘ork business men, with offices on vjpper floors of skyscrapers in the finaticial district, step into the elevatur and, just as likely as not, go up instead of down. It isn’t that they have landing fields on the roofs and wing thelr way home to Jersey or to the far corners of Manhatian. They live up there. And not only do they Ive on the roofs, but high above the street they enjoy all the comforts and conveniences of the best uptown homes. Of course the roof dwellers are few in number compared with the thou- sands who still Uve in customary abodes, but their number fs increasing. Among the best known financiers who: have adopted this new mode of living are Percy Rockefeller, Sir Ashley Sparks, head of the Cunard steam- ship line in this country, and Henry L. Doherty, head of the’ Wall street firm of Henry L. Doherty & Co., and @ former resident of Denver. Well Known Men Live There. Rockefeller and Sparks have dwell ings atop the new 22-story Cunard building at 25 Broadway. Doherty has living quarters on the roof of the Battery Park building, a 16-story structure. The Doherty “bungalow” covers the entire roof of the large bullding. It contains 16 rooms besides hallways, porches, sun parlors and “hurricane deck. Here the bachelor hedd of many enterprises in many parts of the country lives alone with a retinue of servants, as isolated as if he were in the heat of a primitive country. After the hush of night closes over the tip of Manhattan, when a pedestri- an in tho streets is a rarity, the only sounds which penetrate to his serie are the low-voiced fog horns of craft plying rives which enclose the bat: tery on two sides, and the harbor which lies beyond it. Besides reception, sleeping and drawing rooms, the “bungalow” con- ® gymnasium, Handt(ul and squash court, billiard room and chem- ical laboratory, in the last of. which its master who ts also an inventor and scientist, spends many hours a week in experimentation, Sixteen Miles of Telephone Wire. A feature of the apartment of which its owner is particularly proud is the bed in his living quarters which, by merely pressing an electric button may be made to move automatically through a concealed opening in the wall to @ sleeping porch outside. More than 16 miles of telephone wire are said to have been used to install the apartments’ communication sys: tem, which includes a portable trans- mitter and receiver which may be plugged in at any one of the half doz- en or more contrivances with which each room and hallway is equipped. The entrance of the apartment, at the head of a flight of stairs from the ‘fourteenth floor, is adorned by an oak- en frame with the legend “A. D. 1829” anda stone sill, both brought by Mr. Doherty from the home of his grandfather in Columbus, 0. Womens Activit omen of Wyoming Protest Against. | Girl Heads Wale Law Gass Music Adds TolWOMAN UNBOUND BY PARTY fact that Miss Helen Frances W;: dast y man Continental Village Dedicates Monument - Honors Memory of Mothers of Revolution + ° - ° F ILL, 2» +» Oct. monument to the mothers: of the Revolution, belteved to be the first of its kind in this country, was dedl- cated at Continental Village, a few miles north of this town last, Sun- day—the 144th anniyerséry of the burning of the village by the British. The monument, a 15-ton granite boulder, was presented by Stuyvesant Fish, A bronze tablet sets forth that the v@lage was a military post and depot of supplies in the Revolutionary war and that the monument is dedi- Putting Away The Seraaile “Winter Apple; Two | Successful Ways Burying Them in Pit Is Effec- tive—Wrapped in Paper More Simple Method Nobody ever cared for a shriveled, tough apple and yet every fall many People stock” up on apples and after they have had them @ few weeks won der why they are not crisp. Dryness and heat aré the worst en- emies ot apples, which should be stored in a place where there jg enough moisture to keep them from shrivel- ing and where the temperature is as near the freezing point as possible without actually freezing the fruit. The best place to store apples is a pit out-of-doors. <A shallow pit is best Line it with four inches of straw ana pile the apples in a high cone. Goyer the apples with six or eight inches of straw and a layer of the same thick ness of dirt. The top is left open for ventilation in case of a recurrence of warm weather. The pit should not be built and filled until after the first frost, and should not be heavily covered until severe winter weather sets in. If a pit is not desirable or practic- able, piling the apples on the floor of an outdoor cellar {s much better than putting them in bins or crates where the air Is drier. If one is so: situated that keeping apples in a pit is not practicable a more simple way is that of wrapping them in a paper and storing them in a barrel or a box. Jonathan apples, for example, have been kept this way until Inte In May. Probably the ap- is the first woman of ‘|into the cascrole covered with a can . _———$—_—_ ies ‘Where'er a noble deed is wrought, © Whene’er ts spoken @ noble thought. Home Business -THES IS ONE DEVELOPMENT - OF UNRESTRICTED SUFFRAGE Her Newly ired Priv- leges Woman- Those Within Old Par- ties and Those Who De- cline to Consider Affect There was some question at the adoption of the nineteenth amendment as to the influence the woman voter would have upon politics. Proof that she is a factor for good has been forthcoming in so forceful a way that it behooves political leaders to here- 2iter to consider women in their cal- culations. For the first time in history wom- en recently participated in the. delfb- erations of the Massachusetts Repub- lican state committee and signalized their political debut by being respon- sible for the adoption of a motion that had been tabled by the men as being too revolutionary. The con- troversy was over the question of the advisability of Inquiring into details of policy and biography of proapect- ive candidates. It was in line with the discussion of general political en- Ughtenment and for the study, of Efficiency Of Postal Forcesi— _|Donations Build er - raph stead etal And Furnish Home ing More Results From Night} For Poor Family Eeapheyes ist Mieneapole. (| sow With te) Onildoan: * MINNEAPOLIS, Minn, Oct. u4—| About to Be Evicted, Gets Faced by the possibility of losing Brand New Home Free thelr loaned phonograph, from which 2 tyetane$as the music proved to be a boon for the postal clerks who worked on the “graveyard” €hift from 7 p. m. to 3 a. m., the night workers, through the aid of Postmaster E. A. Purdy, have decided upon a plan to buy the fn- strument and insure permanency of the music. Working to the rythm of harmon- lous melodies since August 12, the men became so accustomed to the music that thought of separation from it created pronounced «depres: sion among the workers. From ques- tionnaires examined and results ob- tained, it was proved that music litted the burden of the night workers and made them more te The music craze {fs not a tempo- NEW ORLEANS, Oct. 8.—A home constructed of materials donated vy builders’ supply men on a lot pur- chased with contributions from real estate dealers, erected by union wors- men free of cost and furnished by furniture \dealers with no hope of re- ward, has been given Mrs. Frank O'Connor and her nine children. Frank O'Connor, the breadwinner of the family, was killed in a fall sev- eral months ago. When the family he left was on the verge of being evicted The New Orleans Item heard’ about thuir-plight. The public response was amediate, Doll Sheds Tears Hat for a Stove rary. fad of the men, Postmaster | fe é Be t. ‘The opening of the fall term of the Yala Law School, disclosed the | Purdy declared, adding that it ef feteeie cream: lerisiation for in: Mllamson bad carriéd of the honors of | “cacy fa keeping up the more of/ Fin ad Cookery} there are evidently two forces in clase the night workers has in recog: y the feminine political ranks—that of hized by Postmaster General Will as the non- who we 5 Hays. While nt Washington in con-}) “1¢ you hi aie peepate.te ptied partisan. ‘eighs both sides of a question in the same fatr spirit, and that of the standpatters whose views differ little fromthe old party dottrines except on legislation regarding women.| Of the two, the non-partisane appear to have the — peekeaee Sa Proved by the forms accompli! by jational League of Women Voesras” # Women “New Broom” in ‘Politics, In_connection ‘with municipal gov ernments throughout the country, women have figuratively put on the dust-cap and grasped the-broom with & right good will, to sweep down the cobwebs and uncover the dusty cor- ners of the city’s political life. ‘The following report from the Bos- ton League of Women Voters shows their activities in that city: ic “Final .steps have been taken by the executive board of the ‘Boston League of Women Voters to set in motion the league's machinery for giving its endorsement to the candi- dates. for munftipal office most worthy of the support.of women vot- ers, A special committer, known as the muntcfpal election committee, has been created for the work, consisting of the members of the league's exec- ference with Mr, Hays, Postmaster Purdy informed his chief of the re- sults of the questionnaire sent to every one of!the sixty or more clerks on the shift. The consensus of opin- fon was that: > Less effort was necessary to keep steadily at work. ‘Tho.men were in a better frame of mind, be At the ond of the shift, the men felt less tired. Less amount of waste time. Talking and chatting was practical- ly dispensed with. Brightened faces reflected the bene- fit of the siusic. . Worries, financial or domestic, were kept out. of the mind. Proving the valuableness of the phonograph, the machine ‘was not used severa] nights. A decided change was apparent, according to the fore- man’s: report. to Mr, Purdy, When the machine was playtig, the men SRS INAPAL LES were through with their work before Mrs. Walter Granger, who 1s seek-|the duration of the shift, while on Ing election to. the: hoard of education, | two of the-nights when the instru- Norwich, Conn.,| ment was taken away, overtime work. to-FUn for @ town: oftice. was neceasary, the foreman reported. Many Waysto Use Tomatoes Can Your Own Tomato Soup x a ‘The housewife who in the fall cooks ner tomatoes, carefully strained and -anned. them ,as ‘tomato soup has a ceservolr upon which to draw to’ give variety to the hdéme table throughout ‘he winter atid/spring months. . The advantage of having soup instead of the .ordinary, cinned tomatoes is that when the .time comes for prepating the dish, no delay is required for straining the vegetable, and the in« gredients are quickly combined. them now," says Mary to her doll. Whereupon she squeezes a bull’ con- cealed in the doll's back and two large tears gush forth from the dolls eyes. Such is. the new crying doll recontly invented by George J. fioefler of Stapleton, N. ¥., according to Popular: Science. ‘The doll’s head is entirely hollow and water tight except for two smali holes in the eyes. A.largo cork fits in the neck and through it runs -n tube that terminates outside the doll's body. A bulb is attached to the end the the tube. Thus if the doll’ head has’a few inches of water in {t, drops will ooze from the eyes when the bulb is squeezed: When Coffee Is Done, ‘8 the coffee done?” That's a hard question. Now, however, there is a coffee-pot that stops functioning when the coffee is done. The pot is divided into two sections by a metal partition. Through its center runs a tube and at the top is a compartment resembling a percolator. The. coffee is placed in the lower compartment, as it is hented it rises in the tube, flows through the coffee, and dropssin the upper compartment. This process continues until there {s-no more water in the lower half—the coffee’ is done. Hat for a Stove. 5 Should your hat be made of inflam- able material you can use it to cook your lunch in says a certain New York Woman. She turned her hat upside: down, filled it with water and placed it over a alcohol stove. When the water reached the boiling-point, she dropped in two potatoes. Later > ° > ° cated “In memory of the mothcis of the Revolution, -who watehed. and prayed white our fathers fonght that might be free" \ ir, Fish's grandsons, Peter Stuy- Yesant Fish and. Nicholas Fish, clad in buff and blue imitations of the Continental army uniforms, unvelled the monument in the presence of a large assemblage, made up of town: people and representatives of patriotic societies. The dedicatory address was delivered by James Sullivan, xgtate historian. five bushels of apples. The additional length of time the fruit will keep will more than repay the expenditure of timé and labor. potatoes were cooked she emptied the water out of her hat wiped Jt dry, and put Jt back on her head. Perfumed Cookery. That is the Ictest novelty in the preparation of food. It has been tried in Paris. Chicken with lilly-of-the-val- ley sauce and veal cutlets with old rose! Jules Mainstave, the inventor of the new perfumed dishes, claims that the high purity of, manufactured per- fumes makes therm perfectly safe to use for this purpose. , When Persia Meets Paris euly” Sift one quart of flour with one teaspoonful of salt. With finger tips worl in two tablespoonsful of but- ter. Moisten with a teacupful of ice cold milk or water and knead until {t forms ® smooth easily-handied dough. Beat the dough until it blisters; roll into a sheet one-half inch thick, cut Into small rounds (about the size of a silver dollar). Prick with a fork, let- ting the pricks go clear through. Bake about 30 minutes in a steady oven. the interest. of women in the forth- coming disarmament conference and to demonstrate to the members of the conference that they will have the whole-hearted backing of. the woman: hood of America in any plans they may devise for the reduction of arma- ments by international agreement and the removal of the sources for in- ternational friction.” French Accent Can, Be Acquired But . Not French Feet Tomato Sauce, Occasionally when serving hamburg steak try making a tomato sauce. Heat one pint of tomato soup and thicken with one-quarter cup of; flour beaten smooth in a little cold water. Season with salt and pepper and pour over steak. This same sauce may be served with stewed tripe kidneys, and omelets. A cheap steak may be put of tomato soup and sliced onion, sea- soned with salt and pepper and Gooked slowly for three hours. Once in a while add a can of Soup to the Sat- urday baked beans. The family will appreciate the chang ple is preseryed in much the same manner as it is in a pit, by making {t less subject to changes in tempera- ture and the escape of moisture through evaporation, fe It is not difficult to wrap quite a; lot of apples in this way. Newspapers torn into squares eight ‘yches each way will enclose any ord..ury sized apple; and it is astonishing what a large number of such squares a few newspapers will furnish, Neither’ {s it. muth of a task to wrap four or HINTS FOR OBTAINING HELPFUL RESULTS IN SOME SIMPLE WAYS Popular Sclince.) : @rom A modern equivalent of the old automobile tire, The tire forms @ m: time swing ia made from a discarded ore comfortable seat than the ancient narrow board, and the rider can sling comfortably to the aldes, Suspending the Ure by # single rope permits of a variety of gymnastics, the rotating motion being popular with the small bi nd girl, Using Inner Tube for Hot Water Hottlo. If you have an old inner tube for which you have no other use, you may take part of it for making ‘a’ hot-water bottle, A small hose nozzle with a tight-fitting screw cap is cemented into an operiing cut in the tube. The ends of the bag are closed by cementing them. ways useful and {t will he found advantageous of the tube into hot-water bags in order to be prepared for emergenci How to Neutralize 0: Should yeu put milk end onieus in your ice absorb the onion taste ard become very desagresable, substance that absorbs tastes and smells, Such bags are ol- to convért several’ pisces dora in Refrigerator, pox the milix will seen Butter ig another And still one can not have sev- eral refrigerators, so what then? Place a smali box of coke or charcoal in the corner of the refrigerator, It will act ag a deodorizer and will absorb The coke should pa hat time it will have become thoroly 41 kinds of smells, and keen the food wholesome. changed eyery three weeks, for in t saturated, ———— eee f Macaroni au Italian. Sdme day instead of a meat. dish, serve macaroni au Italian. Break one-quarter pound of macaroni! into a dish of boiling water. Add two table- spoons of butter and a small sliced onion.” Cook.slowly ‘for one hour. The svater should boll down to a creamy Mquid. Add a cup of grated cheese and a pint of tomato soup, place in a baking dish and sprinkle with but- tered crumbs. Bake for 10 minutes in a hot oven. Venetian Eggs. A. delicious supper dish is venetian oggs. Heat a cen of tomato soup to the boiling point and add one pound of grated cheese and a pinch of soda and stir until the cheese 1s thérough- iy melted, Add one cup of milk to a beaten agg and combine egg inixture with> cheese and tomato: es stirring very rapidly. Season to taste and serve on saltines, Risotto, Anothery supper dish is Risotto. Place one .cup of rice in cold water and cook briskly for five minutes after tt begimesto boll, Drain and add two tablespoons of melted butter and one- halt onton chopped fine, Cook’ until It ts absorbed, then add one cup of tomato soup, and two oups of water. Cock until rice is tender and the water is “nbsorbed, Add one-half eup of grated cheese and serve at once, Southern Beaten . Biscuits. | Sometinwe when you are out of bread When Persian meets Parisian and the combination is transplanted to America tho lawa of the Medes and the Persians take on new mean4 mouth and a sting in the heart of the ing. This beautiful afternoon gown from Paris & of ‘Persian grocaded neighbor who hurt your feeli ska Welvet, combined with black satin. your feelings. Successful Farming. try the deliclous southern “beaten bia:d Our hearts in glod surprise st To higher levels rise. => she added some 2ggs. When eggs and 1 > s a“ N

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