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PAGE TWO -FLECTRO-GHEMIGAL ENGINEER TD TEST RIGHNESS OF GOLD STRIKE Interesting Process at Cleveland-Wyoming Well to Include Electro-Plating 700 feet below Sur- face by Man Prominent in Science With a view to establishing whether placer gold in com- mercial quantities will result from the discoveries made by the Cleveland-Wyoming Oil company in a hole which was drilled last year on the Kaye Creek, an eminent electrical been brought to Casper from sary t Notve who ts a member of the VARIETY BILL ON VAUDEVILLE PROGRAM, IS Character Dancing, Vocal and} Instrumental Music Comedy Will Hold Forth. and | Four big vaudeville numbers and a| feature picture will open at the Iris theater tomorrow for a two-day run.) From advance notices the vaudeville| attraction will retain the high quality| that has mi ed the vaudeville at- tractions at the Iris for the past sev- eral weeks. Dawn younr tional waltze and toire. ‘White and Button feature a sing- ing, talking and comedy act that is/ hard to classify. Comedy in both| “nat” stuff and acrobatic novelties! feature the act IMian De.Vere, “The Girl With} the Voice” in songs and stories, is} one-of the big numbers. She is said| to have wonderful power, volume and tonal quality to aid a pleasant so- prano voice. Sykes.and Sykes in an act that con) tains.a laugh, a song and a thrill close the bill. This team composed of a young man and a shapely woman in- tersperse comedy and daiing stunts in thetr act. Sy aes ENDOWMENT COMMITTEE, FOR AETIRED PASTORS IN CONFERENCE HERE Ministers high in the councils of the a Fran women who are a team of feature interna- character dancing. Classical Chinese dances and French ypsy numbers are on their reper- Methodist church are in Casper today attending a meeting of the conference endowment committee, an organiza- tion which is fostering a plan of rais ing a fund for the endowment of re tired ministers. The meetings of the committee are being held in the conference room of the Citizens’ National bank and are closed to the p It is probable 0) J in ‘Wyoming will be worked out to Rer-| greatest example of the aucceas of this mit this state to reach its quota on|experment in chown in, the famous the gosta lotted under the endow-| Rand mines of Africa.” ment plan Mr. Notves a Py y. Among those who are in attendance Adbtegont Soca Pysetess be =® the ‘mecting are Bishop Mead” ot ly nigh University will collaborate cir Denver, Dr, J.B. Hingley, secretary Of| tne chemical analysis’ of the Sudinee| ane jboard_ of conference: claimantsio€ | inte the teste tu he sada hare Seucego. Rev: “W.! 1a: Brench (Of Alas) "TF tne chemichl rhactions hee ‘quan. mie, Dr. W. T. Dumm of Cheyenne-| titative gold in the deposits Mr. Not- Ira W. Kingsley of Sheridan, H. Be vest says that the discovery will be Durham, chairman, i Rev. H. E/ of invaluable importance to Casper Shepherd of Douglas and this district. Tho process of re- |covering the gold from the subter- Ultimatum Date On Reparations Is Postponed PARLS | ices | scientific ee oi! dome northwest of Salt} engineer, Robert Notvest, has Cleveland to make the neces- , Standards committee of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers, the! jorganization which has control of the electri codes of the country, was| brought here for the purpose of con: ducting the test which will require! jan electrochemical expert. While drilling on the Kaycee dome year t pany encour Cleveland-Wyoming ered a subterranean water course, which from indications was rich in placer gold. The gold veries were made at varic lepths below 700 feet. Drilling we Was susperded and crude tests fertaken to establish wheth the discovery was of commercial port | alizing that a thorough test of th roperty wduld require the serv of an electro-chemical expert the Cleveland-Wyoming company wrote Institute of Electrical gineers to learn whether a test of this kind could be made with modern instruments. Mr. Notvest was recommended as a man capable of making the test. Mr. accompanied by J. E. McGlory, field representative and Rob- ert L. Mueller, president of the Cleve land company left this morning for the field to begin the tests which in all probability will extend over a pe-| riod of two weeks. | Notvest ri | Before leaving Mr. Notvest outlined the process in a semi-technical way that will be necessary to establish whether the gold strike holds commer- cial importance. The first step will be to make a com- plete survey of the property effected| to establish the course of the sub-| terranean water course. To accom- plish this purpose a copper cable, cap- able of carrying 200 volts and carry- ing a small aluminum kothode will| be placed in the hole. ‘The ordinary | iron pipe will be driven into the sur- face of the ground and the electrical| power exerted. When the electrical power ts ap Parent an instrument for measuring) resistance will be placed in operation | on lines running from the surface pipes to the power generator. In this manner the test will show conclusively the direction of the water course as| evidenced by the surface pipes show-| ing the least resistance. The secogd step wil be to place a solution off potassium cyanide in the hole for the purpose of diffusing the waste material. When the waste is eliminated the gold mM the solution will be found in quantities on the alumi- num kothode which will be placed on the capper cable. This electroplating | Process will be of great importance. The next plan will be to determine the commercial importance of the gold strike by pumping the hold with po- tassium cyanide and then through an electro-chemical process to establish the extent and saturation of the de ) 3 | Such a procedure has been followed successfully in late years in establish- jing the extent and confines of deep ranean placer deposits will be merely @ process of forcing potassium cyanide into one aperture entering the under- ground water course and removing the gold deposit from another hole. While he believes that it will take sometime to complete the tests Mr. Notvest said that he would be able to tell definitely whether there was gold in the hole after his preltminary tests, After that hi§ duty will be to deter- mine the extent and to choose if poss!- ble a cheap source of hyro-tlectrical power which would be required to commercialize such a proposition on a May 23.—Indefinite post- Ponement of the M 31 ultimatum date f a reparatic settloment by Germany is being considered by the reparations commission, and may be offered the Germans upon condition accept essentially the com- that they mission's full program. large scale. Tho results of his tests and the findings are of vital impor- tance to Casper. | CHAPLIN PLEADS FOR PERMIT TO KEEP MOTHER IN AMERICA a | WASHINGTON, May 23.—Immigra- tion authorities are investigating the conditions upon which Hannah Chap- lin, thé aged and shell shocked mother of Charles Ch motion picture actor, cnd Sidney Chaplin, is allowed to remain in the United States. This became known with the issuance of an order by E. J. Henning, assist- ant secretary of labor, granting stay |. of time to enable Mrs. Chaplin and counsel employed by her sons to pre- sent legal grounds for permitting her to be a semi-permanent resident in the/| United States. Mrs. Chaplin, herself an actress, it ‘was explained, was mentally deranged by shocks suffered during one of the first of the German aerial raids on London during the war. After the ‘war ended, her sons desired to take her to California to give her environ- ment and treatment which would ease her condition and possibly, it war hoped, restore her reason. She was after some difficulty, given permission ft |to enter the United States.and remain for one year. This time has expired, | and the question has arisen whether | she can be legally allowed a longer period of residence. The Chaplin brothers, upon her ar-i ival in the United States, gave assur-é nce that she would never become a} charge upon public charity and in-| led her in a cottage at Santa} ‘oni Calif., under tare of trained nurses and with expert attention. | The attending physicians report, it | was said, that her mental condition has| improved steadily, despite her ege and| peotnssl alsa have presented a state-| jment that Charles Chaplin is worth |more than $1,000,009. j It is argued that the extraordinary |circumstances justify some yielding in the legal barriers against admission to the United States of aliens either permanently or tempora lunsound. A dec case it was said, | nounced. short! ] board of Review. ion in Mrs. Chaplin’s| is expected to be a by the immigration | dients are removed. be Casper Daily Cribune One hundred and fifty quarts of good Canadian whiskey an acrial rum runner crashed io earth near Croton, N. Y. the contraband. The pilot es: troopers hastened from White Plains the liquor. They are shown together the plane landed and who notified the Airplane Rum Runners Crash to Earth eee 7 eu Be to the scene of the with George J. McCall, former deputy troopers. accident and took charge of the wrecked oe fell into the hands of New York state troopers when The plane came from Montreal, Canada, loaded with aped in an automobile that apparently was walting to picir up the liqnor. State plane and sheriff who owns the farm on which SCORES OF GRADE SCHOOL PUPILS APPEAR TONIGHT IN CHARMING OPERETTA “The Quest of the Pink Parasol,” the grade school operatta to be giv- en this evening at 8 o'clock by the finest talent of four of Casper's grade school pupils, bears with it an atmosphere of fairyland and flower gardens, The pretty costumes ar- ranged for the affair, the delicate touches of the solo and chorus parts, and the remarkable novelty and en chantment of the story itself, should make it a charming performance The operetta is given under the direction of Miss Jean Quinn, assist- ant music supervisor for the schools. Miss Quinn is being assist- ed by Misses Grace Houchen cipals and teachers. are Nora Nelson and Wade Cramer. The schools taking part are: Cen- tral, West Casper, North Casper and | Elk. Following is the program: Act 1. Poppy Garden - -- Early Dawn ana | Mary Morrow and by the grade prin- | Accompanists | Fairy Queen - ~ Jessie Tapp. Ruth -__- Dora Stanley Poppy Maid -.-_. Darline Kimball Fern Wilkes ‘oppies, Fourth and des—Helen Regan, Beula May Forcade, Doroihy Angel, Ellen Logue, Marie Boone, Ethel Allsman, Marguerite Mitchell, Eula Stanko, Adeline Shoemaker, Edna Rhine- smith, Ruth Schwartz, Jean McKen- dry, Ruth Lewes, Helen Rhinesmith, Kathleen Sickling, Jean Wisner Ruth Tylet, Helen Reed, Betty Weid- erhold, 2 Gibson, Nettie Farris, Anna Bell Rosenthall, June Steven- son, Lucile Jessen. Gardeners - Garden Fairies— Bees and Butterflies First and Secund Grades Third Grades First and Second Grades Sunbeams -~----- Song of the Nightingale. Garden Friends Revel of Garden -_ ~ Fairies Raindrops, Sunbeams, Perfumes, Bees and Butterflies _. Dewdrops — First and Secpné Raindrops —--- s WaT First and Second Grades Garden Friends Fifth, Sixth, Seventh and Eighth Grades Pages ,--- Elk Street Kindergarten Solo Dancers— Elaine Myers --.--------Dewdrop Jean McKendry ----. Poppy Lady Ruth and Poppy Maid exchange places. Act 2. Poppy revel in the garden. Act 3. Garden of wilted poppies. Queen restores huppiness to all. Dora Stanley -_ Dance of the Hot Edith McGrew, Howard Blakley ~- Gardeners AMIN SULPHATE SOU LANDER, Wyo., May 23,—Three miles east of Lander, is a drilling rig that Has just been put in place the past week, and soon a drill will be sent toward the center of the earth, but nowadays drilling rigs are so common in Wyoming that the erection of a drilling outfit attracts but th emark, “Drilling for to any earnest in- quiry. But the rig east of Lander is dril- ing for something different than oil, something new in this neck of the woods—they are drilling for Alumin- um sulphate,’and as the bit is grind- ing its way into the depth of the soil it is hoped that it will be a great help in the upbuilding of the now very much crowed Lander oil field. Aluminum sulphate, aluminum chloride and aluminum bauxite are found in mines in solid formation and also in solution in water. In the former state they are mined and through a certain process the ingre- Most of this, however, contains iron which is next to impossible to remove, hence the sulphate and bauxite are not pure. Then these elements are found in water, the water is evaporated and Fowls Heavy With Gravel, Sale Stopped * NEW YORK, May 23.—The public saved $40,000 over the week-end be- cause inspectosS of the health de- { partment refused to allow the sale of chickens whose crops were filled with sand and gravel. Ole Salthe, director of thé food and drugs bu- reau of the department, declared one of the crops weighed one and oné- half pound: Sel + PIANOS. ‘Will you want a piano by June 1 for the little daughter just out of school for three months? Make your wishes known by a short letter to the Chas. E. Wells Music Co., Denver, Colo. We will help you solve your probiem. 5.22-8t hae The Royal National Lifeboat Insti- fly mentally tution of Great Britain is building a} $motor ilfeboat to hold 150 people. It will carry searchlights, a line throw- ing gun, and a net into which wrecked people can jump to safety. be € LANDER INTERESTS DRILLING FOR MINERAL DEPOSIT GHT IN WELL BEING SUNK by means of certain processes the mineral substances are obtained. In the new Lander field the latter pro- cess will be used. Mr, Swope, the promoter, has started drilling with a ten-inch drill and will go down un- til he strikes the water which he believes contains the desired min- erals in solution. He believes that he will strike the water in less than one thousand feet and that a flow- ing well will be secured. The water will run into vats, the vats being heated, and then as the water evap- orates the mineral is left in the heating vats. This solid residue goes through various processes after- wards in order to separate it into its different substances. There is a ready market for all the finished products, in fact the demand. is greater than the supply the world | over. The sulphate is used to a | great extent in purifying water, and tons of it are used by nearly every large city. Chloride is alrgely used with crude oil for different works, and from bauxite all our aluminum ware is made. | With the Lander territory filled with oil which only needs the bit of the driller and with the chloride | obtained right at the door, much can | and perhaps will be developed in | these lines. The new enterprise 1s situated in the midst of the new Derby Dome oil fleld, the Dallas ofl field, the Pitin- kitt oil field and the Spokane- Wyo- | ming oil field. | | | | | j ‘headaches, colds and many other Kero o Be eg Give half a eps ang the baby will quie | well. A dose costs less than DR. CALDWELL’S SYRUP PEPSIN THE FAMILY LAXATIVE Dr, Caldwell’s S: is the largest selling liquid laxative in the irey jet rm for 2 A it m of Egyptian iy and other simple laxative berbs with J B pepsin, the safest remedy you can five a'baby. HALF-OUNCE BOTTLE FREE Few escape constipation, $0 even do [Pomrnmengs Poy ast nghod send you a Half-ounce Trial Bottle of ry Syrup Pepsin FREE OF CHARGE so that you will have te handy when needed. Si | Caldwell, 516 Washingzon none | 8 . Tit. Write sae today. acent. i ‘ades | 5,000,000 GRAIN EXPOATS SHOW BIG DROP IN TEN MONTHS WASHINGTON, May 23.—Grain ex- ports fell off by nearly half during the ten months ended with April as compared with the corresponding per@ fod Ist year, according to trade re ports issued by the commerce depart ment. . For the ten months* ended with April 1922, grain exports aggregate? $506,000,000 compared with $950,000. 000 during the same months of 1921 while for the months of April export of grain Gregated $37,000.00 anist 2.000.600 barrels with $11 000,000 in April 1921 Corn exports for April aggr t | 18,000,000 bushels worth $13,000, against 10,000.000 bushels worth §% 00,000 in April, 1921. Whes.t exports fot April aggregated bushels worth — $7,000,00¢ against 18,000,000 bushels worth $29, 006,000 in, the same month a year ago while exports of flour aggregated one million barrels worth —_ $7,000,000 against 2,00,000 barrels worth $11,000,- 000 in April, 1921. Exports of meat during the ten months ended with April aggregated $109,000,000 against $165,000,000 dur- ing the corresponding months of last year while for the montly of April the total was $10,000,000 xgainst $14,000,- 000 for the some month last year. ap OUNCES Foy 250 27 BAKING POWDER No better made regardless of price. MILLIONS OF POUNDS BOUGHT BY THE GOVERNMENT Do You Remember Who introduced Printing into England? *°SX8}-r(222? (Signs of deep thought) Does, this help you? ‘The Commercial Printers are the first in quality and their maxim is “The Best Price.” If it doesn’t associate again: Printing — Commercial William — the first Caxton — Maxim What is the phone number? 9—Fine &—Great O—My J—Bird. Don’t forget to call this number 9805 Night or day or the Best. Job Printing You'll be missing. ADJUSTMENT OF REPARATIONS IN aIGHT, REPORT Committee Is Working Out Problem and Allied Govern- ments Will Accept De- cisions. PARIS, May 23—(By The Associ- ated Press)—The allied governments represented on the reparations com- mittee are looking with considerable hope upon the prospect of a perma- nent solution of the German repara- tions question, \growing out of the meeting of the committee of the inter- nation financiers including J. P. Mor gan of New York which will begin in Parish Wednesday. The circumstan: under which the committee was formed indicates that the governments of France, Great Britain, Italy and Belgium are disposed in advance to re- ceive the conclusions of the commit tee with great deference. Sir John Bradbury, British minis ter member of the reparations com mission, is understood to have made the first suggestion that the commis- sion should invite eminent persons in : The milk for every-day use is RED CROSS EVAPORATED MILK clean — sweet — pure | | Try this popular recipe for RED CROSS i SCALLOPED POTATOES 1 tbep. salt 4 medium sized potatoes i 1% cups water : tbsp. butter cup Red Cross Milk Wash, pare and cut potatoes i in thin slices. Put a layer in | buttered baking dish, sprinkle with salt and dredge with a small amount of flour. Add milk and butter and bake i until potatoes are soft. This } recipe serves six people. H EVERY GROCER SELLS IT, | doth allied und neutral finance to ex amine into the question whether ar Fancy Early Ohio SEED POTATOES - CASPER STORAGE Co. 313 W. Midwest Ave. Battleship ~ FLOOR COVERING Linoleum, Print Linoleum Inlaid Linoleum LARGE STOCKS—CARLOAD JUST RECEIVED TUESDAY, MAY 23, 1922. a international loan could be issued for Germany. THE NEW PERFECTED ASPIRIN THAT B ONLY Nothing can so quickly or ef-| laxative: these two aim to overs fectively combat pain as does as- drawbecks of ordinary Pirin. This is « fact neither phy- come rin. “PINGLE'S LAXO ASPIRIN tab- lets are equal to five «rains of genuine yo Cy rg advan. tage of a digestant and a genti effective laxative. They are scien= Ufcally right. Ask your physician, He wil tell you they are better aspirin than any of the older forma. Be sure to ask for TINGLI'g LAXO ASPIRIN, the new, improved three points: sicians nor laymen can deny. ‘To man: Wever, aapirin brim, \eevere attacks of heartburn or Mlatulence. and this has preventet them from continuing its use. ever hough they realized it would rid them of thetr suffering, Now they can use TINGLE'S LAXO ASPIRIN. This ts genuine espirin, with all its patn-comb: ing wer retained and two new aquailtion added—e @igestant and a TINGLE’S LAXO ASPIRIN Ask Your Druggist for the “Three Point Box* ‘ uutic Research Labo: . Therape ese: tans ratorica, ror *5O ~ This cabinet gas range with canopy and white enameled splasher for $50.00. Has full size oven and broiler. OTHER TYPES OF NATURALGAS | STOVES FROM $25.00 UP. | Casper Gas Appliance Co., Inc. 119 Fast First St. Phone 1500 Cork Carpet Congoleum GOLEUM RUG. Priced”: aes GOLEUM RUG. Priced GOLEUM RUG. Priced —..: demand for this big sale. from the factory. CONGOLEUM 6x9-ft. Genuine GOLD SEAL CON- 714x9-ft. Genuine GOLD SEAL CON- $11.00 9x9-ft. Genuine GOLD SEAL CON- $13.00 GOLD-SEAL CONGOLEUM, by the yard 9$0c We have just received a carload shipment of Congoleum goods to supply the 1 No factory left-overs or “seconds,” but fresh new de- signs of rare charm and beauty. Every one in perfect condition, just received We Have Any Linoleum or Floor Covering Chamberlin Furniture Co. Corner Second and David Streets 9x1014-ft. Genuine GOLD SEAL CON- GOLEUM RUG. $15.00. Priced ___. 9x12-ft. 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