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PAGE TWO _ ORGANIZATIONS TO LEND ALD IN FINANCE DRIVE Many Clubs and Orders Ex- pected to Take Active Part in Securing Red Cross Funds. ‘Wholesale commendation of the American Red Cross chapter here be- cause it ts a functioning organiza- tion has resulted in general support being offered by many organizations in Casper for the fund drive which wil be instituted, February 26 and last tnt March 4 The Natrona County chapter of the Red Cross is hand soldier relief ‘work in Casper. It is also acting as a central clearing house for the tea charity organization of Casper and also is performing important and money esxving functions for Natrona county. TA coming before the people-of Cas- per for support at this time the man- agurs of the Red Cross here announce that they have to make the appeal be- cause the wide demands that have been made for relief this winter bas Gepieted the financial reserves of the organization until it is virtually with: out funds. The worthy work that has been the organization here must be continued according to the general concensus of opinion. In. dorsement of many of the leading men amd women of this commmnity indi cates that the accomplishments of the organimtion are generally known and appreciated. Labor organizations herd contem- piste loaning their support to the Red Cross because of the methods it has employed in functioning for the re Nef of persons temporarily brought under the pressure of unfavorable ¢co- nomic conditions. Church, fraternal and civie organi- zations will back the undertakings of the Red Cross, and scores of teams will be lined up and ready to enter the field when the drive opens in SOC Cross. One of the biggest features ef the @xfve that will be launched fs that Gollar of the money im continuing the successful of relief that has brought it favor @nd imiorsement here in the trying xyes of readjustment. Wits. TEGLAND 15 LAID AT REST HERE SUNDAY Sunday afternoon from the Shaffer- Gay chapel the funeral of Mra. Lor ena Tegiand was held. The Rev. C. M. Thémpson, Jr., pastor of the First county, Iowa, July 7, 1866. In 1883 Utime 18, she was married to Mr. Teg- Janda. For several years they lived im)Casper but for the past three years have made their home in Salt She passed away at 1 ovlock morning of Pebruafy 17, 1922. Mrs. Tegtax was a member of the Adventist church. She js survived ber husband and by efx grown Nelson Tegland and Mrs. H. SY Davis of Winnett, Mont. Mrs. O. B. Wheeler of Wells, Minn. Mrs. E. R. Gidner, Mra. Anna Ricker and Creek Mike Tegland. Nineteen grandchildren aleo mourn her passing im addition to a host of triends. Mohanda K. Gandht, leader ef the nationalist movement in India fe the central figure of the remarkable “pacifist revotution™ which has stir- red the 313,000,000 paople of the ro dian Empire as, perhaps, newer be- fore since the days of the Sepoy mutiny He has been called a philosophic anarchist, a new Tolstol He be came more dominant than ever in the campaign against British rule in India when, in December last, the Indian National congress in ita an nual session at Ahmadabad invested him with sole executive powers of that congmas with authority. to ap- point his success “in any emergen- oy” The congress y<<ed to suspend all other activities in order to concen trate upon ctvil,<lisobsdience, a feat- ure of which was the enlistment the National’ Volunteer corps b included rlso refusal to pay taxes and an attempt to boycott British goods. Soon after the congress a@journed Gandhi sent a manifesto to Lord Reading, the viceroy, offering to ‘Pacifist Revolt’ in India Being Led By Mohandas Gandhi, Nationalist Leader abandon aggressive p«ns provided | tague announced that the govern- the government set free his follow- ers, many hundreds of whom were released from administrative control and fines and forfeitures were re- stored. The British India office promptiy announced that it would not disorss such demands and that it intended to adopt stern measures to suppress the campaign of civil disobedience Thousands of persons were re ported to have been arrived in In- dia under this policy and Gandtis arrest was dafly expected. Tuaere was an outbreak of violence am! 17 native policemen were killed ja a riot at Chauri-Chaura, on the Sen- gal_Northwestern railway. The working committee of the In- dian national congress soon after- werd voted to suspand the civil dis- obedience campaign until the wage of violent feeling had passed. Gandhi announced at Bombay that be had begun a five days’ fast as a penance for the rioting at Chauri- Shaura and “as punishment for those who committed the brutal murders” here. Thereup the British ‘wecretary of \te for India Edwin S. Mon- BUILDING AND LOAN PLANS TO "BOOST CAPITA Increase From $500,000 to $1,500,000 Projected for March 15 by the Wyo- ming Company. The Wyoming Building and Loan association will increaso its capital stock from $500,000 to $1,500,000 at-a special meeting called for March 15, if plans that are being made by the directors of the’ company carry. The original series was marketed in less than six months showing con- clusively that the company has de- veloped # wide field of investment lo- cally. The association was organized in July 1921, by Messrs. W. J. Lindsay, William B. Cobb, W. J. Bafley, W. D. Allely, H. B. Durham, C. E. Little field and George C. Vance. The remarkable record of the ass- ciation is shown in the fact that the entire first series was subscribed in Jess than six months. The records of the company show that despite the fact that it never borrowed a dollar it was through economical manage- ment enbled to make eappreciable loans to home builders here within two months after its organization. It is interesting to note that stock- holders of the concern are located in many sections of the country and that it has been able to com- pete with associations of like charac- ter here and elsewhere. 55 SACRED CONCERT WINS GREAT APPRECIATION A splendid attendance appreciated the secred concert presented by the choir of the Methodist church at the church building last evening. Every seat in the church was taken before the first number on. the program and even the standing room was well oc- cupied. , A program of unusually high qual- ity was presented by the choir mem- bers, under the direction of E. EB. Interment was in Highiand ceme- Fisher. Mrs. A. I. Cook presided at the piano. Solos were sang by Mrs. Burton Mrs. Caruso To Taste Mystery Spiritualism NEW YORK, Feb. 20—Mrs.s En- rico Caruso, widow of the Metropoll- tan opera star, has announced that she is interested in spiritual ism and has enrolled in a small sroup of society and stage people who have been various seances in the last few weeks. “At the first meeting the med- tum hadn’t thy least idea who I was,” she declared, “and ne said ‘I see somebody asleep, and there is a chapel and a priest and a nun. I also see a cross. Don’t worry.’ ~ Mrs. Carugo interpreted this to mean the chapel where her husband Fests in Naples. It is being cared ‘for by members of a refigious order and the cross is the small cross of her rosary which she had placed upon her husband's body. “I am not secking any message from the dead,” she explained, “but I have become tremendousty inter- ested in the subject in parely an tm- personal manner.” gram. A male tions chosen. | a $$$. Nye, Mrs. Boyd Osborn and HE. L. Bottoms. A violin obligata by Mrs. T. J. Riach added much to the pro- quartet composed of the Messrs. H, 1. Bottoms, Boy Osborn, BE. E. Fisher and A. 14 Cook made its first appearance during the evening, and many favorable comments were mde upon their work and the selec- ment ‘When Mark Twain published TBE FEATURED BY AMERICA, THREE DAYS “A Anticipating discussion, Mark Twatn As a lawyer he defended the In- dians who had becn arrested in South Africa and was himseif im- prisoned there. During a long cam- paign in behalf of the Indians in South Africa, he was jailed three times and once ambushed and tft for dead but eventually obtained leg- islation to protect the rights of the Indians. He organized an ambu. lance corps to serve in the Boer war and rendered similar service in Lon- EEF xe ue rity if F t don during the world war. Gousbeageaary Gaenede te eae He went back to Ihdia in 1915. poe pm kee yin oy DRT] The idea of self-determination had Sigs ot marca for Worcester taken deep root in that empire and shire sauce to it Durst Into flame when 600 Indians were killed and 2,000 wounded in the Amritsar uprising and Indians lions of Hindus has steadily gained foree untiu he is called in India Many of the greatest ex- perts prefer Mazola as a salad oil because it blends more perfectly with the other ingredients of the dressing. This is one rea- son why Mazola is so ex- tensively used today by the best clubs and hotels as well as in dining cars, on lake steamers and trans-Atlantic liners. FREE iteacea of 64 pages. Write Corn Products Refining Co.— Department A, Argo, Dl. —ON SALE TODAY— OPERATIC macchiav! ‘Thon?) From “The Masked Ball. LR iit doens't (rasa). Bartoaa 1a Tinian Oruseppe Denise “"NSTRUMENTAL ‘Melody (Opes >instetn) Plancforte Sole ling ee J Leopeta Godowsky } Ate tor G String Bach) Violin Solo.....Bronislaw Huberman 3 in Overture CHietww) Corarre Br hosers and His Band ‘Windsor—Overture Concert Band Merry Wives of Giegiat) Concert, Ban Walter B. Itellan Atre—m (Son Gelossl—Mamma Mia—Martnarielio —O Sole Mio—Campana di San Guisto) Arr. by Perry. Ac- coraton ‘soto wa i capeee died Bubee Mario Perry e Mario Perry and Joveph Peppino POPULAR Old Southland (Creamer-Layton) Baritone, Ernest Hare 179 = bo Contral od iocemwtemyleae cto a{ | KgSe-A (Caldwoll-Kers) Prom TOeed Morn as Prt Im Blucbird Land (Witiams-Short) Irene Soprane and Tener. Audrey anc Charlies Hart ‘That's Hew I Believe in You (Dubin-Cunningham-Rule) Tenor “4 ake ‘Tames Cra Mae nie ven and FOR DANCING sel School House Blues — Wor Trot “Music Box Revue". ‘Smill’—Pex re Stevensea) Introducing “Have You Forsotteny nef ‘Te > By the Pyramiés—Fox Trot (Fierito) z1e3 ‘Gene Rodemich's Orches:ra ‘Se Right or Wreng—Fox Trot (Sizemore-Bi io (irving Berlin) From the ‘Bennie Krueger's C-shestra han-Krausgritl-Rurtnett-Cooper- 's Orchestra THE RICHTER MUSIC CO. THE TWENTIETH LUNDBERG CONCERT COMPLIMENTARY TO THE AMERICAN LEGION TO BE HELD AT THE M. E. CHURCH MONDAY, FEB. 20, AT 8 P. M. swine, Bat have all the Sally Ann Bread you can eat.” “Oh, Sir, that will be a most wonderful treat.” You will find Sally Ann Bread to be just as much of a treat as Curly Locks did. Try Sally Ann Bread Every Crumb Is Delicious THE CASPER STEAM BAKERY ZUTTERMEISTER BLDG. “Curly Locks! Curly Locks! Will thou be mine? “Thou shalt not wash dishes, nor yet feed the PHONE 109 “THE BABY BOND STORE” Next Door to Iris Theater Phone 306 Building Materials _ Weare equipped with the stock to supply your wants in high grade lumber and build- ers’ supplies. Rig timbers a specialty. 3 3 KEITH LUMBER CO. INGS—SHOP AT NIGHT, p 29 Pairs Boys’ Shoes; sizes 10 to 13%. Take "em at 22 $ Open Evenings OPE! ~ —SHOP AT NIGHT OPEN EVE THE MAN IN THE BARREL and DAY AND NIGHT IS NOW ON --- HUNDREDS OF BARGAINS 145) 114 West Second Street {i EVENINGS—SHOP AT NIGHT OPEN EVENINGS—SHOP AT NIGHT OPEN EVENINGS--SHOP AT 121 Pairs Men’s Riding Pants. Values to $3.50. Per pair ______ < 317 Pairs Gen- uine Army Shoes... $6.50 values, pair __ e HARRY YESNESS 1 lot of Cordu- roy Coats; sizes 36 to 40. Take ’em at___ WHEN THE CLOCK STRIKES 6 TONIGHT We Will Offer the Following Bargains Until § Q'Clock—SHOP AT NIGHT $1.00] THE MAN IN THE BARREL wi $1.95] 5 jo fe g res} aa : vA Z 2 is 5 La} > ce a fe Co S & Zz : Z — Zz cep) TAILORS and CLOTHIERS Take the Best Suit in the house for - e Shop at Night Next to Stockmen’s National Bank ? UHDIN LV dOHS—LHSIN LY dOHS—SSNINGAT NaAdO