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1 . SATURDAAY, JUNE 23, 1923. SOCIETY RECENT AND COMING EVENTS IN SOCIAL CIRCLES OF CASPER Maccabee Tea Wednesday. The Maccabees will entertain at a tea Wednesday, June 27 from 2 a’clock until! 5 at the home of Mrs. Chris Wagner, 333 Grant avenue, Among those who will serve during the afternoon are Mrs. George Lilly, Mrs. William Bmmell, Mrs. George Fisher and Mr. C. S. McBride. eee Moose Picnic Sunday, June 24. Members of Casper lodge No. 1182, Loyal Order of Moose, will give a picnic Sunday, June 24, at Paradise park for all members of the lodge and their families. All those who going to attend are asked to meet ft 9 o'clock at the Moose hall. Cars will be provided by the order. A special feature of the affair will be a baseball game between the men and ‘women, Hoffman-McCosh Mariage Friday. Miss Mabelle Jean Hoffman, of Hutchinson, Kan. and Mr. Joseph Rollin McCosh, of Casper, were united in marriage at the Methodist Episco- pal church, Friday afternoon, June 22, at 6.30 o'clock, by the pastor, the Rev. Lewis E. Carter. The were at- tended by Mr. and Mrs, Joseph Malt- by of Casper. Mr. and Mrs. McCosh will reside at 1023 South Spruce stret. . . * BoyleD’Amico Marriage. Miss Mary Boyle of Colgate, Okla. and Peter A. D'Amico, of Peru, Ind., were married Friday afternoon, June 22, at 4 o'clock at the Methodist Episcopal church, by the pastor, the Rev. Lewis E. Carter. Those present as guests were Mrs. Effie M. Boyle, mother of the bride, Mr. and Mrs. O. H. King, Mrs, C. H. Snyder and Mrs. G. EB. Boyle. Mr. and Mrs. D'Amico will reside at Fort Morgan, Colo., where Mr. D'Amico {s proprietor of Ne drug store. Birthday Party Wednesday, Mrs. ©. R. Hawley entertained at a children’s party Wednesday after- noon, June 20, at her home on West Twelfth street, in honor of her son Junior's eighth birthday. The after- noon was spent in playing games after which refreshments were served. Among the children who at- tended were Bernice Dunn, Sylvia Lambert, Westley Dunn, David Edle- man, Kenneth Abbott, Muriel Hind- man, Grace Elsie Cunningham, Shir- Yey Hindman, Mildred Grey, H. Hut- sen and FP, Huason. ove Mr. and Mrs. O. H. Meyer were hosts at an Informal dinner party given Thursday evening at their home, 731 East Fifth street. A color scheme of yellow and white was car- ried out for the decorations with snap dragons and other spring géwers adding much to the attrac- ‘tiveness of the affair. Following the dinner several musical selections were played after which bridge was played, honors being taken by Mrs. D. P. Vanburgh, Mrs. Harry Meyer, Orlo Hest and Roy Jones. Guest present for the evening were Mrs, D. P. Vanburgh, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Meyer, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Jones, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Hones, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Scullion, Dr. and Mrs. J. J. Donavon, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Ward, Miss Jaunita Meyer, Clarence Hest and Orlo Hest. Mrs, Andrus Entertains. Mrs. R. M. Andrus was hostess at an informal garden and bridge party given yesterday at her home on Dur bin street. Honors were won by Mrs. John B. Barnes and Mrs. Don Smith. ‘Twenty-eight guests wee present. MEDIUM BROW HAIR looks dest. of all after a Golden Glint Sham. po dvertisement. City Briefs B. A. Beyer and W. V, Ulin are vis- iting with friends here for a short time from Belle Plaine, Ia. Vv. B. Maghie is spending a few days here from Lander. see 8. C, Colver came up yesterday from Douglas and will spend several days here on business. eee Harry Cornor returnes yesterday from Oklahoma where he has been at tending to business afairs and visit ing with friends for the last month. see Osle Stanrefer of Greybull is visit- ing here for a few days at the home of John Logan and family. eee S. R. Cotoner arrived this morning from Denver and will spend several weeks here on business. a ats6 Henry Wyatt of the Wyatt hotel has purchased the Charles Adams George F. Baldwin returned th mirning from Cheyenne where he h. boarding house on West Yellowstone. sine é been for several days on business. Serle K.C. Myers is here for several days atending to business affairs from Col orado Springs. . . H, L. Tebbs is here on business for a few days from New York. eee J. L. Fuller has returned from a ten days business trip in the south- ern part of the state. anielxs L. N. Williams and son left last evening for the east where they will spend some time visiting with rela- tives after which Mr. Williams will go to Rochester where he will take treatments at the Mayo Brothers hos- pital. Sam Kilmere is here on business for a short time from Thermopolis. eee F. O. Leach and Homer E. Robins are here for a short time visiting with friends from Denver. - ee F. C. Tong {s an out of town bust- ness cajler here for a week from Omaha S. L. Staman is spending a day here visiting with friends en-route from Denver to his home in Skeridan, eee M. L. Gore left last evening for his home in Tulsa, Okla., after spend ing several weeks in the state look- ing over oil lands. . Henry F Foster ‘s spending a week here on busines from Los Angeles for the T, K, Moore Tire company. see Omer R. Logan and son have re- turned from Denver where they have been on a business trip for a week. eee J. F. Smith is among the out-ot- town callers here for a few days from Denver, +. © Francis F, Harkin left this mornt ing for Thermopolis to be gone a week taking treatments at the hot springs. SAS Se as CARD OF THANKS We wish to thank our friends and relatives who were so kind during the sickness and death of dur beloved father, CLEM FREEL AND FAMILY, CECIL FREEL, ND MRS. CECIL THE HUMAN ZOO Copsright 1923, by Publis Ledcer Company | IN Only a matter of time, CTIVORA, SPECIMEN NO. Che Caspr Daily Critune News of Women’s Clubs MARY TOBIN, Society Editor It’s Easy, She Says, Once You Learn How “Miss Ethel Wood, 18-year-old Philadelphia dancer, ceesn’t think it’s hard to do a split, once you get the knack of it, And that comes. ¢‘\o says, from plenty of exercise, plenty of milk and plenty of sleep. ‘The latest pleasure deviee to water bicycle. It 1s capable of mi water, and some enthusiasts hope miles to the All Aboard for the 3-Mile Limit be introduced at Atlantic City is the aking a fair rate of speed through the to be able to make it go the full three edge of the prohibition limit. An TRIP OVER CASPER WOLDS MANY DELIGHTS Bob Cochrane Has Rec- ord of 5 Years Flying Without Accident. Have you ever seen the town in which you live? You can't say that you have unless you have seen it from the air. The Panorama spread before your eyes is one that you will remember for some time to come. There are the refineries, whose proportions will as- tound yor there are newer sections of the city whose existence was un- known a few months ago; there are the roads leading each direction from Casper covered with creeping ant-like things which you know to be auto- mobiles and trucks. All this you get in the alr ride. You are assured of absolute safety by reason of the fact that your plane is as good as can be built and your pilot is finishing his fifth year with. out a semblance an accident In a demonstration few days ago, he cut off the motor at 2,000 feet and landed his ship in a fifty foot circle previously designated. The price for the flights has been set at so reasonable a figure that every one should try to see the won derful panorama of Casper from the air, Mr. Cochrane has an advert\sement n another part of the paper giving ull the particulars of his offer. pe ah cecil TRIMMED” 15 PICTURE WITH PUNCH COMING 10 WYOMING THEATER SUN. Ed (Hoot) Gibson gives a speed: punchy performance in. “Trimmed,” vis latest Universal production, wh will be shown for the first time Sunday at the Wyoming theater son has that elusive thing knov mn mong screen artists as “personality” | From the first glimpse of his smilinir ountenance as a returning soldier “Trimmed” until the final fade-ou n a pretty love scene with litth Patsy Ruth Miller this Universal star has theater goers cheering for him nd laughing with him, The story concerns a war hero who returns to his home in a western county and is elected sheriff by his admiring fellow citizens. His candi- ‘lacy ia-sponsored by a crooked politi- cal boss who expects the Young man to be amenable to “influence.” But Dale Garland, the role taken by Gib. von, shows armuch greater regard for She rights of the voters who elected him, than for the dishonest schemes of the men who are attempting to use him for their own personal The girl in the story, daught he man ¢ st opens the new sheriff's Garland ate murderer, eyes to conditions: pe real moe: h Gib- | nd defeated at the po'ls | mule, lent him by the girl, is the only mount Garland can muster for the hase, but he brings back his man by a clever ruse not revealed until he last. ‘The star is ably supported by Miss Miller and Alfred Hollings worth, Fred Kohler, Otto Hoffman Dick La Reno and R. Hugh Suther- ‘and, The picture was directed by Marry Pollard. Miss Miller is a budding star. this p In ture she is delightful as the shidhood sweetheart of the young *heriff: No picture in which “Hoot” Gibson appears is without plenty of thrills, aetion, and domance, and Trimmed” has more than its share The picture is one that you will en. joy seeing. ——$<$<—__. Can Modern Girl Shatter Social Code--Question Is the modern, up-to-the minute, emancipated, unfettered and untram- meled girl overdoing it? Can she carry her own latchkey, smoke cigar- ettes, keep late hours, ignore the conventions, smash the old ‘deals without at the same time smashing herself? Or, in another way of putting it; Is the so-called “bold girl" necessarily a “bad girl?” A great many women leaders are to suffer uneasy qualms emselyes this question. answer? Daughter: Wood Paramount production with Gloria Swanson as the star, which comes to the Rialto theater today the answer is a smashing surprise that will make the audience gasp. Senator Warren to Arrive In Capital |For Harding Fete CHEYENN 1 States Sen ren of Wyoming, In “Prod! a Sam June 23.—Unit nees E. War-| has been in Fri who Alaska with Secretary of War Weeks, will arr! in Cheyenne in time to greet next Mon President Harding day, June TIRGGED EDGE’ HERE SUNDA “The Ragged Edge,” Distinctive Pictures’ of 1923, distributed by Goldwyn, coming to the America theater on Su day and Monday. This picture second the South Seas released ,, The Ragged Edge” is by Haro! ‘MacGrath, an author of internation: of) with the sun. great features | one of the most spectacular stories ot this year,)a and promises to be at the top in| Hilton, beautiful and artistic photography of Southern Pacific and Chinese scenes. f The story is of “two young foo!s,"" one runing away from injustice and the second from justice. They meet in the city of Canton, China. The boy collapses in the hotel lobby and Is nursed back from the ragged edge of death and destruction by the girl. These two waifs of fate marry. They are ‘befriended by a South Sea trader, who takes them to his faraway island. The husband, hewever is kept from his wife by a sinister shad ow that lies across his remorseless conscience—he is a fugitive and be eves it unfair to mar her life. But in a series of breathless episodes they | are finally brought together. | The hero role is ably played | Alfred Lunt, known as one of t ; handsomest actors on the stage today ‘GARNIVAL FETE + ENDSTONIGHT | In spite of extremely cool weather last night the Arabian Circus, being presented for the American Legion by the Wortham shows at East S jond and Lowell streets, enjoyed pat ronage far in excess of that expected. |The crowds on the midway were dis: appointed when the wind did not die by | However, they made the best of the is occasion, and thronged into the many n-|shows. No one envied the diving is| girls, who with no fear of weather, {Punged into the big tanks without tremble. Even Viotet and Daisy ] the famouse grown together girls, appeared in their summer even- ing's best, and did not seem to mind it. Most of the crowd on the grounds | Went in to see these young women The shows wil: close their engage ment here tonight. 1d al Kansas City Life Insurance Total admitted assets_____ Liabilities except capital — Capital stock paid up — Unassigned funds (surplus) piccnEa durin, Business in Wyomi: Insurance written _ Gross premiums received Losses paid ___ Losses incurred - for the STATE OF WYOMING, ) County of Laramie. se I, H. A. Loucks do hereby certify ment of the annual statement filed in my office, as required In test’mon of H. A. Publish June 23, 24, 25, 2 DE. all The right hedge of tire for the he duty truc Goodrich Trac’ Type. Real non-skid. Grea‘ traction. “Best tn the Long Rum? Liberty Garage 428 S. Elm Street Casper, Wyoming | From..__........ Remarks: _NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. Office of the Insurance Comm‘ssioner. Cheyenne, Wyoming, May 25, 1923. Company, Kansas City, Missouri. i year ending December 31st, 1922_. Disbursement for year ending December 31st, 1922 , Insurance Commissioner of the State of Wyoming, that the above and foregoing is a condensed state- by Section 5264, C. S. 1920. 'y whereof, I have hereunto set my hand and affixed my seal of office the 25th day of May, 2 Total Bacteria, per cc. -$25,928,363.00 $23,966,087.76 200,000.00 o 1,762,275.24 $25,928,363.00 $25,928,363.00 -$ 8,324,693.45 -$ 4,365,680.70 Year Ending December 31st, 1922. -$ 604,759.00 519.95 6,000.00 6,000.00 the above named Ins rance Company, A. D. 1923. LOUCKS, Insurance Commissioner. PAGE THREE and Orgamzations DENVER KX. OF 6, WILL|LABOR COMMISSIONER 10 AVOID CONFLICT WITH SPEND WEEK HY CASPER CASPER RODEO DATES) es commit e in will oming, w here 'Ss ted dquarters w eck he The Casper Rodeo been advised by Denver Civic and Commercial atl Knights of Columbus nO in v the dates of which conflict with the affair here, Campbell Christian. local association, postponement Dodge, bu Denver organ association the assoc that has been postponed. pre REMOVAL was notif: yest NOTICE the ¢ moved to th David Ph a EXPERT watch and ing. Casper Jewelry Jeweiry repair Co., OS Bldg. he NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION Office of the Insurance Commissioner. Cheyenne, Wyoming, M Globe & Rutgers Fire Insurance Company, New York, } Total admitted assets -$50,109,794.27 abilities except capital — Capital stock paid up _- Surplus over liabilities "York. 2,290,404.78 00,000.00 19,389.49 $50,109,794.27 $50,109,794.27 Income during year ending December 31st, 1922 $26,370,198.31 Disbursement for year ending December 31st, 192 257,672.93 Business in Wyoming for the Year Ending December 31st, : Net risks written - . * ~ = eeaes “Oe 3.00 Net premiums received — 04 i4 77 ll 10,819 STA TE OF WY )ss. County of Laramie. ) H, A. Loucks, Insurance Commissioner of the State of Wyoming, do hereby certify that the above and foregoing is a condensed state- fment of the annual statement of the above named Insurance Company, filed in my office, as required by Section 5264, C. S. 1920. In test*mony whereof, I have hereunto set my hand and affixed my seal of office the 25th day of May, A. D. 3 . LouC » 25, 26, 27, 2 Insurance Commissioner. Publish June 23, 24 NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. Office of the Insurance Commissioner. eyenne, Wyoming, June 8, 1928. Patriotic Insurance Company of America, New York, New York. Total admitted assets —- 2 $ 300,000.00 Capital stock paid up —— $ 200,000.00 Surplus. over [abilities 100,000.00 $ 300,000.00 $ 300,000.00 Organized and commenced business November 13, 1922. STATE OF WYOMING, ) )ss. County of Laramie. —) I, H. A. Loucks, Insurance Commissioner of the State of Wyoming, do hereby certify that the above and foregoing %s a condensed stat ment of the annual statement of the above named apeprence Com Y> 264, C 92. filed in my office, as required by Section 5264, C.S. 1920. In test'mony whereof, I have hereunto set my hand and affixed my 19 ; Insurance Commissioner. seal of office the 8th day of June, A. D. H. LOUCK Publish June 1 Hillcrest Water Analysis As Furnished by State Chemist, Laramie, Wyo MR. K. W. LEAVITT, Hill Crest Water, Casper, Wyo. AR SIR :— I am enclosing my report upon water is in first class condition, and you need not hesitate to sell it for domestic uses. Yours THE STATE OF WYOMING State Chemist—Laramie SANITARY WA Parts In Laboratory No......9463 K. W. Leavitt, Hill Crest W Collected...........April 16, 1923. Source of Sample ._._ Spring... vee: Odor,..........--- None Col Sediment, None........ Free Amm Nitrates... eh} jae Nitr Oxygen Consumed,....__...09.. nF cs Total Solids,.......—-19.2__... Fixed This water is in first class condition and suitable for April 21, 1923 | your sample of Spring water. This truly, L, E. WALTER, State Chemist. TER ANALYSIS 100,000 LARAMIE, Wyo., April 21, 1923 ater Co., Casper, Wyoming.............— —April 18 , 192% .-Received . Turbidity,. OF eniseny ay None onia,.:...0509 Albyminoid Ammonia 011 | ites, None Chlorine, 3 Hardness,.._.....21.6 de = Solids,._.12.0... Colon Bacilli, per cc., None all domestic uses. L. E. WALTER, State Chemist