Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, January 19, 1924, Page 3

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jew Club Is At a meeting held this week at | Mi the home of Mrs. G. O. Rankin, 1053 Elm street the Ceramic club of Casper was organized. Following the organization of the club re- freshments were served by the hos- tess. Officers who were elected and charter members include Mrs. E. C. Stout, president; Mrs, G. O. Rankin, vice president; Mrs. L. E. Bay, Mrs. J. W. Bingham, Mrs. J. M. Whisen- hunt, Mrs. Besse B. ulley, Mrs. Ira K. Lugar, Mrs. Lee Happis, Mrs. James L. Waugh and Mrs. Harry L. Funkhouser. The next meeting of the club will be held Fgbruary 7 at the bome of Mrs. E. ~ Stout, 1325 South Cedar street. eee Art Department Meet Next Week. The Art department of the Casper Woman's Departmental club will meet on Friday afternoon of next week, January 25, at the home of the chairman, Mrs. W. W. Sproul, 141 West Tenth street. Mrs. John M. Whisenhunt who is chairman ef the program Committee will be in charge of supplies and any one wishing to secure material before the next meeting may get them by th Shoshoni and will be the guest her sister, ‘Mrs. Mr. and. Mrs. John Cc. have returned from a weeks’ pleas- ure and business trip spent in Den- ver. : LE days at the first of the week fh Lander attending to business af-| CHICAGO, Jan. 19,—Rev. fairs. Francis Tollard expects of James. Anderson at ls for a time. see - eee Carpenter spent séveral eee M. B. Forbes arrived in the city © yesterday from Denver and will Charged Superior Judge Foell has make his home here having accept- ed a.position with a local oll com-:land a divorce. pany. eee R. W. Williamson is among the Denver business men spending sev-|written him eral days in tho cit; ee to leave 8 evening for Los Angeles to spend several months. _ calling Mrs, Whisenhunt, phone 178k. . Birthday Party Yesterday Afternoon. Mrs.-E. C. Hermon entertained yesterday at a birthday party for her daughter Helen at her home on East Second street. Games were played and refreshments were served at the close of the afternoon by Mrs. Hermon, assisted by Mrs. Frederick Hudson. Among , the children who attended were Emma Mae Anderson, Florence Jackson Helena Sauton, Mildred Ford and the guest of honor. see Spaulding-Weigand Marriage Ws he lini fri evening for st. ednesday. Miss Ruth M. Spaulding of Cas- per and W. J. Weigand, oil man and rancher of Glendo, were quictly married Wednesday, January 16, at the First Christian church, the Rev. R. R. Hildebrand yerforming the ceremony. They were attended by Mr. and Mrs. Spaulding, parents of he bride. [he couple will make their home at Glendo. eee Muscovites to Hold Celebration. Kremlin Azov. of the Imperial Order .of Muscovites, will meet on Monday, January 21, in the Odd Fellows’ temple. Business of impor- tance will be considered, including a ceremonial. All-princes and mem- bers of the Order of Oriental. Hu- mility and Perfection aro requested to attend, and wear their fez. A consolidation of these two greatest of the side degrees orders was eéf- fected at a joint meeting last August, held in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. This will be an important meeting. Arrangements have been made by the committee for the serving of refreshments .following the cere- monial and all members of the or- ganization are asked to be present. cee Catholic Girls’ Cub leeting Next Tuesday. The regular meeting of the Catho- Uc Girls’ club will be held next Tuesday evening at 6:30 at the Mullin® club. All. members of the club are asked to be present as. business affairs of importance will be transacted. in to Baptist church will give a pie social this evening at the church, corner of Poplar and Fifteenth streets, to which all ladies are to bring ples to be auctioned off during the enter- tainment. An invitation is extended to the public to attend. eee Mrs. Philip Girard entertained the Friday Bridge club yesterday at a 1 o'clock bridge luncheon at her home, 815 East Fifth street. Deco- rations carried out in valentine de- signs were used. Honors at ‘bridge for the afternoon were taker’ by Mrs, C. A. Myers and Mrs. Harold Barr. Guests for the afternoon werd Mrs. J. G. Bartram and Mrs. C. A. Myer. Members who attended were Mrs. Glen Hopper, Mrs, M. G. Marrin, Mrs. Walter Brewer, Mrs. J. P. O'Brien, Mrs. G. B. Strom- berg, Mrs. Harold Barr and the. hostess. The club. will meet again pn next Friday at the home of Mrs. Hopper, 343 East Third street. eee: Bake Sale Today ‘ At Stone Grocery. . . The Chicago and ,Northwestern Rallway Women’s club are holding a sale of baked goods this after- noon at the Stone grocery store on Second street, PERSONALS Mr, and Mrs, W, J, McPhail. of Bates Hole are yiaiting with friends here for several days, bs eee Mr, and Mra, F, B, Morgan are visiting here for several days from thelr home in Sher‘dan, eee Jack Henry of Billings arrived last evening and will visit here for Several days with friends after which he will leave for Kansas City where he had accepted a position, oe to ut! of to . Mrs, T, C, ‘Tonk’n ing several days thi been spend- week visiting with H, O. Barber in Lander, eee Mrs, Lulu Foster arrived in the city this week from her home in MANY MINS BROTHERHOOD CULAsS for FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH 0:45 A. Mf, NEW YORK, Jans 19—An adver- tisement in local newspapers fo. “the services of several gentlemen gubernatorial nomination. Long, chairman of the state public testant Liquor from Vancouver, 1 destined to the Yukon territory will talents of the little star has yet be allowed to croms Alaska, under Deen given. h'm. Tinged with a bit the terms of the agreement which Of Pathos, the experiences’ of the will be reached at conferences in YoUns hero who runs away from an Ottawa between representatives of Lite bape ata ccena a sean the Canadien and U, 8. govern. | ments, according to information re- , “Alesman, and.{s finally catapulted celyed here by high authorities, ciated deputies closed with a vote of 415 to 151 in support @f the government. Paul T. Thompson ‘has returned from Laramie ‘and Rawlins where) has been on business for several days. George D. Paine, district manager for the Frick-Reid Supply company,, has returned from Denver and Raw- 8 where he has been spending the last week on business for his company. Mr. and Mrs. L. O. Osborne left yesterday overland for Cheyenne to spend several days visiting with lends and relatives. eee Miss Ruth Owens will leave this Louis where she will spend a two weeks’ vacation trip with her parents, see Cc. B, Price and. daughter, are visiting here today from their home Thermopolis. eee T. A. Merrill has returned from Salt Lake City where he spent several weeks taking treatments, Judge and Mrs. Matson came in this morning from Cheyenne, ——————___ 20 Scions of | Nobility Seek ing bona fide European Possess! Uitles’* yesterday brought; 20 appli- <5 cations to the manager of a new aty) dancing. pavilion -who decided wanted noblemen for hosts and ‘in- structors. Of the 20, a lAnaetancoutats, thiea"clomea Baie: bubters.— those” who: é’e ‘and leave! Ish titles, three Russian and one fottunes, Germgn said he was a second cousin Characters. he they were the former kaiser. All asserted they could prove their daims to the drunken* butler/while Sidney blue blood. Three said they were willing to work for $20. a week while one as- serted ho would not leave his pres- Pie Social ent job, which paid $23, for less This Evening. than $26. The young ladies of the Emmanuel ‘ Nomination to Be Settled By Second Vote NEW_ ORLEANS; Jan. . 19.— Hewitt Bouanchaud, lieutenant ‘gov- ernor, and Henry L, Fuqua, for several state prisons, leading candidates in last Tuesday’s Democratic primary, will, enter a run off on February 19 years superintendent of «determine the winner of the Huey P. Atl commission, the other con- + Was eliminated on the face official returns from 25 parishes and wrtually complete unofficial Se en ie aoe PHA SAYS” STRONG ., |Yukon Liquor. To Be Shipped Across Alaska VANCOUVER. B, C.; Jan. 19,— B, 3 ¢,, An a return favor, it wan said, is a the Canadian customs officials will be instructed to refuse clearances captivating picture and one that small craft loaded with liquor which are ostensibly going abroad, although known to be headed for | the United State Poincare Given Confidence Vote * PARIS, Jan, 19-—(By. The Asso, Press.}—The debate on tho eign policy in the chamber of PASTOR NANED ri} IN DNORGE TO GIVE BATTLE rae of Name é b 0. Athediey scan Carl D. Case, pastor of the First Baptist church Oak Park, declared he would L. J. Martin ts here on business “Sht to the ntmost {cr ‘vind cation for several days from Cheyenne. of his name which was brought into the ‘divorce suit of Albert R. Leland M. L. Flanerty is visiting with ™ember of the church, who testi- friends and attending to business t€@ his wife haa confessed that she affairs here today from Denver. oo loved the pastor. Although the church trustees and deacons had Rev. Case of the indicated that he would grant Le- Leland’s father Rev. H. S. Le- land, of DeWitt, Iowa, a witness for his son, said Mrs. Leland had a letter stating a hypo- thetical case involving “a friend,” @ married woman who had fal'en in-love with another man, an@ ask- ing if Bhe could be forgiven and re- conciled to her husband, He said he replied that the woman's misdeeds could not easily be forgiven. Leland said he had carried notes from his wfe to the clergyman without knowing their contents un- til he forgot to deliver. one and hap- pened to, open and read it. pena se Lae 2g Pres. Coolidge Goes on Cruise WASHINGTON,. Jan. 19—Preri- dent Coolidge crowded all ‘his en- gagements into the forenoon today in order to take another afternoon and evening cruise down the. Poto- mac on the Mayfower. More than a dozen guests were invited to ac- president and. Mrs, company .the Coolidge. FORTUNE. HUNTERS ARE Pavilion Job FOUND IN “TEMPORARY| PRISCILLA DEAN HIT HUSBANDS” AT AMER Sidney Chaplin, Owen Moore, and ia Breamer work tozether. ca: ably in'“Her Temporary Husban which opened at the America the- a yesterday, The picture is a riofous ‘farce dealing. with, fortune | and all the attendant marvelous as) {Moore as the hero who arrives in! time to save something for him- se'f-and for the heorine is. also wel ty cast. . é Chuck Reisner and his “polite” gang of villains get a large share of tho laughter. . Thousands of people are-seen in| one-of the spectacular chase scenes. | It wouldn't be fair to these who! have nct seen the picture to tell the outcome of the story but it is bas- ed on’a situation where the heroine must marry within a certain time in to inherit a coris'derable sum of money. So she selects an Chaplin's work is ~ |aged "and dying man for her hus- band, ‘believing at™ the “worst “he 1d_be: “temporary.” ' - Then complications follow’ com- plications’ and the development of ‘the plot has‘ a'l the tenseness of a hairra’sing: melodrama, while it ig yet Kept within the- bounds of a clean’ farce “comedy. “Her Temporary Husband” ~be- tongs ta the clean sort of enter: tainment that leaves you with a Pleasant attitude’ toward the mov- a COOGAN FILM AT IRIS Jackie Coogan’s big circus p'cture, “Circus Days,” is’ whooping it up at the Iris Theater proving a Strong Coogan attraction. And nearly all who have ‘seen it agree that ‘no story better suited to the into fame ag the star clown of the show,'are more jolly than end, It thoroughly wholesome and will_not be forgotten by any who ste it. Tho local engagement of "Circus Days” will come toa con- clusion tonight, CASPER MONUMENT WORKS Phone 2542 508 South Conwell, @te Gasver soauv wrinune Night ~contro- versy will await formulation of the report of the senate investigating committee report, it was said at the White’ House. Whether éxecu- tive “action is contemplated event: ually was not disclosed. PARIS.—The chamber of deputies gave Premier Poincare another strong vote of confidence on his forelgn policy. Dismissal of Old Grubstake | Claim Upheld SAN FRANCISCO, Calif., Jan. 19 —The state district court of appeal yesterday upheld the dismissal by the superior court of Alameda ofa complaint by Miss Sadie E. Pritch- ard, of Denver, demanding a share of the fortune of Fred King, Colo- rado and California mining man, on the ground she “grub-stked” him in Denver in 1892, | Recently Miss Pritchard got a judgmf@nt for $20,000 against King’s estate im the United States court here on the showing) the “grub- stake” uas paid and admitted by King ‘as an, obligation. The state appellate court held Miss Pritch- ard’s Gaim should have been en- tered against the King estate in- stead of a deposit in a bank which was “demanded as " “partnershi funds." * Norris-Sinclair Finance Bill Is Urged by Labor ! 1 WASHINGTON, Jan. 19.—Repre- sentatives of organized labor urged the house agricultural committee to act favorably on the Norris-Sinclair bill, which woulé create a farmers and consumers financing. corpora- tion. Before tho senate agricultural “WHITE TIGER” WITH AT WYOMING THEATER One of those pictures that destroy! © ) farmers of the country “went be- _ hina” at least $5,000,000,000 in 1923. “Federal aid in diversifying the PAGE THREE. comm.ttee, Benjamin C. Marsh. of|farmers’ output,” Marsh said, ‘un- James P. Noonan, presdent of |as affording the best relief plan for the national farmérs council, sa'd doubtedly will aid in the recovery}the International Brotherhood of/|farmers. E. H. Cruze, vice prest- of agriculture, but the great need ig some method of obtaining fair market prices for staple crops.” | Blectrical Workers before the house committee said bis organization fa- vored the WNorrig-Sinclair measure dent, Brotherhood af Locomotive Engineers, declared the engineers were heartily in favor of it. SATURDA Pay Bills Day ATIONAL THRIFT WEEK . JANUARY 17-23 Pay Your Savings Account First Let the first bill you pay each week or each month be into your Savings Account, then you will have some- thing put aside to meet the emerg- ency bills, which are bound to come one time or another. The man who pays his bills promptly is the man most respected in the community. He acquires’a reputation for Thrift and honesty that serves him in good stead, when the day comes that-he must use his credit for the sudden call upon his resources, whether it is for sickness or for an unexpected opportunity in business. Pay your bills promptly by all means and let one of the most important bills be your weekly, or monthly saving. Remember that the money that you pay into that account is always there ready to be returned to you when you most need it and you have some- thing real to show for it in place of only a receipted bill. We Pay 4% on’ Savings ATIONAL BANK of COMMERCE “‘A Bank of Strength and Service” a false popular illustion is showing the Wyoming theater. It is ‘White Tiger,” a Universal Jewel photoplay starring Prise la Dean. a story of the underworld that disproves the popular fal’acy which says that crime is romantic and all criminals comradely adven- turers. ; “White Tiger” presents only: four figures af importance. There are crooks, international. “explo‘ters"* of nimble tricks who should, by all the Jaws of popular fiction, agree like doves and. trust” each ‘other, to the last haul. But instead of that they present onc of the most hu- morous pictures it has been the pleasure of the theater-go'ng pub- lc to see in a long time. The bick- ering and) quarreling of three erooks who are so dishonest they can't_even trust each other is a novel sight cn the screen, for crooks have usually been, portrayed as be- ing rather. comradely. Miss Dean. Wallace Beery an@ Raymond Grif- {ith carry out the trio of charact- erizat'ons. 4 Matt Moore, remembere’ for his work in “The ;Storm’ and other ‘Universal successes, plays the sym- pathetic leading role ‘opposite . Miss Dean. Like “Outside the Law” that brilliant triumph of Miss Dean's two cr three years ago, ‘ White Ti- ger”) was written and directed by Tod Browning. “POOR PAPA” GLSES AT COLUMBIA TONIGHT “Poor Papa” will play for the last times tonight at the Columbia thea- ter. Tomorrow Dick Hyland's Re- vues will have 4 new one in the way of “The Henpecks” which is con- sidered a riotous program also. | The present. bill is a worthy one, giving every advantage to the chorus, the Manhattan trio, and others to display thelr talent in the special numbers. It is a story in it- self which is not without merit and laughing possibilities, and Hyland and his company makesmuch of it. “Face to. Face” with Marguerite Marsh is the-photeplay. | SHICHESTER S PILLS os mae man od Sree Atay is SOLD BY DRUGGISTS PEARL WHITE. _ LAUNDRY AT YOUR SERVICE Phone 1702 SNYDE é AWAITS - YOU The population of Snyder is increasing by leaps and bounds. Snyder is located at the depot in the new town of Salt Creek. Snyder will receive the benefits of the great development work which will be done in the Salt Creek fields this year. Snyder is an investment. Twenty business houses are doing a thriving business, . New buildings being built every day. Get in Now, Buy Before Lot Prices Are Advanced Again: PRESENT PRICES Business Lots (corner)_-_________________-_$8 00.00 Business Lots (Inside) ---__________________$650.00 Residence Lots ____________________________ $400.00 SOLD ON LIBERAL TERMS Autos Will Leave Our Office at 9:00 a. m. Sunday—Round Trip Fare $5.00 FREE FARE TO PURCHASERS OF LOTS : Don’t Put Off Making the Trip—Opportunity Awaits You WESLEY GROOMS REALTY CO. Room 6 Mokler Bldg. Over Campbell Hardware Store Phone 2364 — nl

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