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SUNDAY, JANUARY 11, 1925 Che Casper Siindayp Cribune GONGERT NEXT. cas WEDNESDAY 19) HAoT OF YEAR Treble Clef Chorus to Make Winter Debut At Auditorium. Whe Treble Clef concert to be given at the Elks’ auditorium Tues- day evening, beginning at 8:15, is the first major musical event of the New Year in Cusper. It marks also the culmination of eight months planning and preparation and four mogxtS of rehearsal and will pre- ft an unusual assemblage of tal felited vocalists in a program of ex icoptional charm. ‘The Treble Clef Chorus wag gititized here last May, with the pri mary aim of encouraging the study | and rendition of good music, with particular emphasis on choral sing- ing. The movement met a prompt response from the various devo- tional and women’s organizations of the city, and the governing board is composed of 18 women represent- ing every church and woman’s club. Twenty-six prominent society wo: men consented to be patronesses, and have been untiring in their ac-| tV@ support and encouragement of tig- ambitfous program of the chorus. Officers of the chorus at present are Mrs. Thomas J. Riach, presi- dent; M president; Mrs, Frederick J. Leschin- «lly, recording secretary; Mrs. B. I Visher, treasurer; Mrs, Lewis ©. M Qlincy, corresponding secretary M C. Gates, brarian; Mrs. 1 ). Branson, auditor; Miss Jess! Mae Agnew, director and Mrs. Ra J Cook, accompanist. fuesday’s concert represents the climax of four months devoted ex- clustvely to the study of octavo mu- sic. It 1s the alm of the chorus later to venture into the more complex field of the oratorio and eventually the opera. The chorus has assembled for this program a group of artists such as ds seldom the privilege of a west- "n city to hear in the course of a ingle evening. Each of them is + qughly equipped in both the na- tural endowment of the singer and the technique born of long training ulder skilled tutelage. Miss Jessie Mae Agnew, director of the chorus, {s especially well qualified for this exacting posttion. lias Agnew studied vocal technique inder Mlle. Radecke of the music partment of Rockford Women's college, Rockford, Il, and voice der Tali Essen Morgan of New FYorle and Harrison Wilde of Chi- «so. Ske formerly was a member of the tausic department of the Col- lege of Arts at Derfton, Texas, has erved as music supervisor in hreveport, La., and Oshkosh, Wis., id has taught in the Institute, La- Vayette, La. Miss Agnew has been music su- pervisor in the Casper schools for two years. She is state chairman of the National Music Supervisors association. Mrs. Berta Smith, feature soloist, . pupil of Oscar Saenger, and .4 operatic coaching under Willis \llinge*She has sung in recitals in bsg? York, Chicago, St. Paul and Tinneapolis, and hasa diversified re- ertoire of opera, oratorio and con ert songs in French, Italian, German Yiddish and English. Mrs. Smith is serving her second term as pres!- dent of the Wyoming branch of © National Federation of Music Clubs and in this capacity has done one work in organizing clubs roughout the state. She fostered © organization of the Nocturne] The sky lines of these hills ib in Casper. Writes out the slow speech Mrs. J. E. Cather, soprano solo-| Of the centuries. st, is & pupil of Mme, Kleinert of] The strife of wind and snow Darlington Seminary, West Chester, | Persists: Pa.. and of Dr, Walthe of Buffalo,| ‘The long rains blur: N.Y, She has been soloist for the} Peacock First’ Presbyterian church of Buf-| And a new o and for the Clef club of Buf- M Miss Palmer is a teacher in Elk I f music ¢ , studied under William of New York? City d uwrence Conservate She obtained he w at Of the diploma in \ gololst comparatively new to] outa, per music lovers {s Miss Frances | 51,1. werman, She studied at the Hor. mer institute, Kansas Clty, where clalized in octaye music and to enroll at Eastman college, | ji¢, hester, N. Y., and will continue | i911, studies with opera as her par: | ypty, ular field. Mrs. Ray Cook is accompanist for th the chorus and the Casper sense mphony orchestra, which will as tin the Treble Clef chorus. Mrs. | scrioug Cools fs known not only as a teacher | joyet of has enjoyed remarkable success | wy jo); jy 1 is now giving instruction to 39] 44 4,4; iplis, but as one of the city’s most ert accompanists,.. Her skill has Th od a part much larger than most | * !2 ditors guess in the success of the | ‘4 to mphony orchestra ily: . The Mrs. ‘Thelma J, Riach, president | 1" le freble Clef, !s a vocalist of Btl9 and a skilled performer on the min sys of YOU CAN’T STARVE | on, « AND BE STRONG for the asthete dies intestate. rannical exactions have driven ev avaricious DIABETES || <3": as’ next fhe old theory of “diet” In treating s Mike expecting an automobile to] Minnie without gasoline, My book | Pozo- Nat and Get Well,” telling how to] Jim and « at | apreciation 1 need will be sent. free, | privileces P this ueelese starving and food Stpald, to any sufferer of dinbetes,| She tite M, Richartz, Dept. 275 MISS JESSIE AGNEW FRANCES BOWERMAN per Artists Who Will Appear im Oddmund Josendal, vicq | TT ooks and Bookmen A Column ef Gosia and Opinion cD OLSON,—————_ neither for her: contentment amend «dis his life. of the sterility of wealth Mr. White skirts danger near platitude, denouement movies the Kirt exasperating his exposition alo, under the direction of Dr.} The palimpsest of spring Jory Obscures the Marguerite Palmer is con-| Of antiqu ‘to soloit of the Treble Clef. She] The artistry tudent of Prof. Bernard Keen | Glosses na of Vivian Aston of Mansfield,| And an old Ludwig, a member of | Or unl artment of the city] written be Appleton, | —Henry The book is notable und sympathetic portre acterization of Bozo, sullen, » much cul apprentice art of b is memorable hool music at Northwestern | spi, ty: art Edwa nd exhaustive the “Brin terms of tragedy i Incident lovatoria. Next fall Miss Bowerman | jij. (rar Cousin Jim type ple individuals, Fred inverted be. Babitt traits comp century || oth Tarking- | * ton portra Magnificent trifle too wonders White's fir s his own contiual exhortation to concrete and ypean culture Ar product frigid the book ai with a satiri presentation of And Mr. make. his consistent hrewd mm: Minnie a Doubleda published , by is one more in| in of western romances Brown & Co., its chron dyenture in the still-haunt. und Mmoonshine-lt hills of Nevada readabie enougt 1 of Tittle Malls there fr} flappe Miss Bower has tentialiies considerably 0 W.} outward “nd 8t., New York,—Ady. an empty social dictatorship. above those Fred nor happl his he ayoids In the s would be shorn Midas touch through some would re idyllic sur. roundings of approximaté pauperism. dy which ha squirrel-cage the Kirby's ramble 5 but which ne vivid | The char thwart ing a he eas suc Cousin nt one of Pr fl of the Treble Clef Concert Wednesday Evening ters," whict London after rousi some years MARGUERITE PALMER PAGE THREE. “Scaramouche” was selection. “The Caro- ‘s latest, which has serially in Good > under the Zu an n will apr ifflin imprint next His Sartoria! Prince of Wales, was sooner 0 Tt has made its ap) under the A King in the Making." Gene and’ Put Doran has publist “5 Bet the Somerse: ran for a y sm when presente 0, It te a dariy esting arraignm of British so particularly that fringe of it which ambitious Americans gain try by right ‘of purchase. Not quite so wickedly as “The ircle,”” It 4 sht bit for so phisticated re s who are not too I ally thin-skinned. Where’ one poetry magazine per ishes, another springs up Sea | Foam published in Anahiem, Calif. is the latest. There are now a dozen | or so published in America: Postry, The Measure, Voices, Contemporary Verse, the Lyric We he Bucca neer, Rhythm the I the | Step Ladder, American Poetry mag izine, Palms. Unfortunate! not ything they publish Js poetry. The second ume of “The caustic series tn which Nation 1 d forth the {diosyncracies atid faults of American ommog wealths has been issued Botti and Liveright. The article on “W ornin, a May ck € 1a WF Walter C. Hawes, R er and Wheatland newspaper man, Mr Hawes represents our state as just haking loose from the throttling control of the Union Pacific which for decades, he contends, hampered, its progre! ee = UNITED BROTHERHOOD VOICES ENDORSEMENT OF 60-10-CHURCH DRIVE The following endorsement of the go-to-church campaign was unan! mously adopted by the Council of the Uni rotherhood League of the Casper churches, January 6 1926, and it 1s requested that it be read in all men's Sunday schoo classes and to all the congregations 1,—That we endorse the go-to church campaign inaugurated by the Ministerial association. to culminate in an evar ic campaign by the churches participating. at there shall be held Su day afternoon men’s meetings at ome convenient place —Thut we recommend that there bo. organized personal workers’ classes in churches and that thege be divide into teams of not to ex MRS. J. E —Photos by Wrensted Wyoming Engraving Co. $18,500 first novel, has published her * and Katherine Thomas Se Kathleen and Charles stman continue her husband i punning reference continuing reputations sir poet-husban: just added to ceed four to the team for personal work 4.—That we endorse the revival method as one of the ways of am tending God's kingdom, and we Heve that there ts need of a unton evangelistic campaign as soon {t 1s practical for arrangements to be made for such —We appeal to Christian peo to pray for the coming of # re- 1 to our community, both {ndi- vidually and in groups a Women are more numerous than men in seven states—Alabama, Georgia, Massachusetts, Rhode Isl- und, New York and the Carolinas _ Olga Petrova, the celebrated ae tr was a newspaper reporter in London before she decided to try for on the stage For the woman of fashion—ané alth—stockings made of thread of aid now to be had at a cost of a thousand dolla Three girls, unattended, recently made an automobile trip from ther better known, both d more to critici of criticism. publishers from in | "Charles Egbert Cradock learn that the fondness for of the garden v ift for che ed in chaps and wicked rowels books that desery understanding of prairie fic-| perhaps, that Bower 1s her west; | willing to sacrifice quantit ter tion now and then for a loftier i © some { lers remunerative achlevement n clothing dummie Irap. nine usually | to the alre: «|ary families, It t* an exploits have | note how wives and as nat bands huve worked «inmultar snd butichgrass, 'Cu cod often with equal suecess at human document | prose ér verse wand then they mplicity. | collaborate, as did C. N..and A Raneh at t Williamson in their long series the High note | light romances, More often they it in a pity, their way soparately, could believe the e Wilson Baker to be the incomprehensible Headache which many persons used to ¢ ‘The announcement that iru Marie Neuralgia four of her| Hamsun, wife of Knut Hamsun, omething better | Norway's greate mtempt © with | ished ju Temple Bailey is t novelist, has pub Friedlaender novel, adds one mora engthy list of lter Toothache Lumbago Neuritis Rheumatism Safe interesting which contains proven directions. Handy “Bayer” boxes of 12 tablets Also bottles of 24 and 100—Druggiste. ky | Avpirin te the trade mark of Beyer Manufacture of Moncactticacidestervet Balicylieaci@ Previous rec! Reriew-Laz home jn Ormond, Fla to Los Ag. home! 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