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» x 4 SATURDAY, AUGUST 22, 1925 By MARY TOBIN Mrs. Porter Will Be Honored at Entertainments. Honoring their mother, Mrs. A. S. Poster of Manhattan, Kans., Mrs. Alex B. King and Mrs. 5. 'T. Butler will entertain at a picnic to be given Sunday afternoon at Gothmore park. On Monday Mrs. King will entertain at her home, 513 Milton avenue, at an informal bridge tea in honor of Mrs. Porter. Casper Man Is Married In Lusk August 17. Miss Lucy Cornet of Lusk and Ole E. -Walden of this elt were united in marriage on Monday, Aug. ust 17, at the home of the brid The ceremony wag performed hy Judge BE. BE, Ewing in the presence of a few friends and relatives. The former Miss Cornet is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Cornet and lived in Lusk for a number of years The groom is connected with the Chicago and Northwestern nad as aforeman. Mr. and M Walden are making their homerin this city, onfer'e Casper Girl Is Guest At Party in Lusk. Tuesday evening, parties were enjoyed of Mrs. C. A. Barber. Mrs. L. H. Mayes and Mrs. Hel Manning entertained with place laid for the followihg, Mrs. Annie Willson of Guernsey, Mrs. Nellie Agnew and daughters, Elvira and Mary Lucille, Miss Mary Griffith of Casper, Joe Manning and the hos- tesses. Mr. and Mrs, A. T. tained Mr. and Mrs. land. Both parties attended the perform- ance of “Robin Hood” at the Garden theater following the dinner.—Lusk Herald-Standard. Ps @inner home two at the Howard enter- tapp of Wheat- Informal Tea Today Will Honor Ohio Visitor. Honoring Mrs. J. V. Hartman and daughter Sara of Findlay, Ohto, Mrs. John McFadyen will entertain at an informal tea this afternoon at her home on South Durbin street, the hours to be from 3 o'clock until 5. Mrs. Hartman, Who is a guest at the McFadyen home, is leaving this evening for Ohio, following a tour of the Yellowstone National park. oe 8 S. B. A. Meeting Monday Evening. The regular meeting of the Se- curity Benefit association will be held Monday evening, at which time a letter from the national council will be r@ad to members. All ladies who are going to attend will bring a box lunch. Following the meéting a dance’ will bé giv PERSONALS Joe E. Denham, Mrs. H. B, Dur- ham and H. O. Barber, who left Cas- per recently for Florida, were guests at the French Lick Springs hotel in French Lick, Ind., en route, eee Mr. and Mrs. Alex B. King have as their guest at their home, 513 Milton avenue, Mrs. King’s mother, Mrs. A. S. Porter, of Manhattan, Kan. Mrs. Porter is also visiting while in Casper with her other daughter, Mrs: S. T. Butler. oe 0. F. Ryden, of San Francisos, piano expert of the American Piano the Yellowstone National Park Where they have been spending a short time and will be guests until this evening of Mr. and Mrs. John McFadyen and daughter, Helen, at their home on South Durbin street. see Mrs. S. J. Snyder visited here the first of the week with friends froin her home in Thermopolis, cee Mrs. A. R. Linhart is a guest in the city from Minneapolis. see Mr. and Mrs. Earl G, Burwell of South Jackson street are receiy- ing the congratulations of friends on the arrival of an eight-pound baby son, on Tuesday afternoon, August 18, at the Natrona General hospital. ‘The little arrival have been named Robert Randolph. art Mrs. George McRory, owner of the McRory apartments on South Kimball street, has returned to Casper from Long Beach, Ca’ where she has been spending the last two years and will make her home here. C. BE, O'Toole, Mary Carr and Susie Carr all of Denver, are spend- ing the week-end in Casper. Miss Ruth Kimmell of Denyer ts visiting in Casper today. vee Mr, and Mrs. S. C. McBride and family are leaving this evening for Nebraska and Iowa to spend six weeks visiting with friends, o 8. Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Barton) Mrs. Oliver G. Johnson and son. Billy left yesterday overland for ‘Thermopolis to spend a few day: . . Mary Flynn is leaving today ansas City on a several weeks’ vacation trip. see George “Chris” Christopherson, assistant athletic instructor in the Casper schools, has returned to Cas- per from a several months’ visit spent in Ohio, his former home. En route to this city he Wsited with friends in Denver for seyéral weeks. eee Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Tenton left this morning for a week's trip to er and Colorado Springs. Parry Dr. and Mrs. G. A. DeFreece and little son have been enjoying a trip through the Yellowstone National Park this week. En route they vis- ited with friends at their former home tn Thermopolis. eee D. J. Smith has returned from a tour of the Yellowstone National Park. . Supt. Grissinger, Assistant Supt. Nelson, Master Mechanic Mekler, Master Carpenter Myers and E. M. Westervelt, all of the Chicago, Bur- lington & Quincy railroad, made an inspection trip of the Casper-Grey- bull division this week. eee Paul Lyons of New York Cit: who has been a guest for several weeks at the home of Mr. and’ Mrs. Patrick Sullivan and family at 109 East Tenth street, departed last evening for his hdme to spend se eral weeks before returning to Georgetown University, Washing- ton, D. C., to continue his college wo! . Mrs. Phillip Offenbacher and chil- dren and guests, C.F. Offenbacher and Miss Lena Offenbacher of Co- lumbus, Ohio, returned Thursday from a several days’ visit with friends in Riverton, Lander and Thermopolis. company, snanufacturers of the Am- pico Players, has been in Casper this week at the local representative, the Charles E. Wells Music store. * ee Mr. and Mrs. Milo Foy cent visitors in Riverton. * . Mr. and-Mrs, Paul Denver motored to visit here for a few d of Miss Elizabeth We Elm street. were re. Mrs. W. P. Swartfager {s visiting friends and relatives in Lander this week. McGowen of eee Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Henning have as their guest at their home on ° ‘outh Wolcott street, Miss Gladys Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Steffens vis-| Fraiser of San Francisco. ited recently in Riverton, PS ES: s2e Eddy Roth, of Fairchild, Ia, ar- Dr. and Mrs. J. V. Hartman and | rived in Casper last evening to visit daughter, Sara, of Findlay, Ohio, ar-| here today with Albert~ Morrissey, rived in Casper last evening from’ Robert Patton and Joe Ball, former She'll Chase Monkeys Out _ Mrs. Flora Meyers pointed mer #chool lent ennessee theorle urphreesbore, Tenn., xt book commission, has been ap- ite . She will purge Tobacco Magnate Plans to Transform All Orphans’ Poverty Into Great Riches|| (By NEA Service.) WELLINGTON, Tex., Aug. 22.— Amid the squalor of a tiny shack on the broad plains of the Texas Panhandle, an old white-haired grandmother once told two little orphan girls the childhood story of Cinderella. With’ poverty on all sides, the little girls, Essie Lee Barton, 6, and Jessie Barton, 4, never dreamed that some day they would suddenly have wealth and all that {tt buys thrust @pon them, almost in the fairylike fashion of Cinderella. But a wealthy uncle back in North Carolina is making the Cin- derella story come true for them. He 1s Buck Duke, son of Wash- ington Duke, who made millions in tobacco, Buck Duke is a brother of J. Bo Duke, who recently gave $40,- 000,000 to a North Carolina. college, and is said to be as wealthy as his brother, Recently Buck said he intended to make all his relatives rich before his death. And he has just found that the two poor little orphan girls out on the Texas plains are distantly related to him by marriage. So he has sent $1,000 to Grandma Simpson, who cares for the children, to gather information abéut them and to end their poverty. More money {s promised later. Already Duke Has sent $10,000 each to R. W. and James Duke, two second cousins, who have ranches near here! One grandmother of the orphans who died at Wellington several years ago, Mrs. Sally Barton, was related to Washington Duke by marriage and used to help him pick tobacco on his North Carolina plan- school friends at Creighton, univer- sity in Omaha. Mr. Roth who has been spending the summer vacation in Cody and the Yellowstone Nation- al Park {s enroute to Cincinnati O., where he has accepted a position as dramatic instructor in one of the schools of that city. He received his P. H. B, degree last spring from Creighton, . Howard Alford has been . trans ferred here from Glenrock Mr. Alford is connected with the Stan- dard Oil company. oe Mrs, Caples of El Paso, Tex., Is a guest in Casper of her daughter and son-in-law, Mr, and Mrs. Charles T. McGrady at-their home in the Miller apartments on CY avenue. . . Mr. and Mrs. John W. Dawson and Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Hall, visited here the first of the week with friends from their homes in Glenrock. eee W. R. Capron of the Sinclair Crude Oil Purchasing company, for- merly of Casper, now of Tulsa ar- rived in Casper this’ week with Mrs. Capron and will spend several days here transacting business affairs in connection with his company. Miss Mary Griffith, daughter o James Griffith of the Tribune, visiting at the homes of Mrs, W. Wolfe and Mrs, Nellie Agnew Lusk. ee Dr. and Mrs. A, T. Wilson of Omaha were arrivals*in Casper yes- terday, . . J Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Rosson vi! the first of the week with M son’s parents in Lusk. cee Mr. and Mrs. J. Roy Calvin and daughter Virginia, who have been | visiting their old home at Sheridan, | arrived in Casper yesterady e¥ening and will spend several days here be fore returning to Cheyenne. While in Sheridan Mr. Calvin attended the sessions of the Masonic Grand lodge. ee Harry C. Hoffman, member of the house of representatives from Lar amie county, and a member of a@ the party. They have toured the Mesa Verde national park in Colo- rado, the Yellowstone in) Wyoming, and have visited other scenic attrac- tions of the west, traveling some: thing like five thousand miles in their voyagings. The party {s driving to Chadron, Neb., today to pay a visit'at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Godsall, old family friends From Chadron Miss Lemon will re turn to her Pittsburgh home. Charles F. Patterson, Jr., an family are in town today from their home ‘In Salt Creek. oe Mr. and Mrs Cheyenne are Casper. Albert B. Bartlett of | spending the day in Otto Bolln of the Richards and| Cunningham company, and family returned yesterday from a tour of the Yellowstone national park. Mh i skies ts ABOVE JESSIE BA TWO DOLLS LER AND PLAYING WITH ND A LONG TEXAS SHOTGU. +RANDMA SIMPSON, WHO HAS CARED FOR THEM IS AT THEIR RIGHT. BELOW IS TINY SHACK WHICH IS R PRESENT HOME. AR tation before he amassed his huge fortune. When the great emigration to the west began, the Barton family and one branch of the Duke family re- solved to seek their fortunes in Texas. But while the Duke»family was making millions in North Carolina, their relatives out west were having a long, hard struggle for existence. Misfortune, and a few years ago the two little Barton girls were léft orphans. Buck Duke has suggested that the girls be put in one of his orphan homes in North Carolina, but Grand- ma Simpson immdelately wrote she wouldn't stand for that. “I'll raise them here in poverty and give them a schooling myself before I'll send them to a home,” she says. Grandma Simpson is not the chil- dren's “grandma” but they always call her that because she has cared for them since babyhood. week-end Cheyenne. visitors in Casper from A. G. Stephens of Lander. is at- tending to business matters in Cas- per today. t= Ss SHAW TRANSFERRED 10) MIDWEST IN INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS. DEPARTMENT Tracy N. Shaw, assistant director | of industrial relations for the Mide4 west Refining company, will be| transferred to Midwest September 1, and will be placed in charge of a new industrial relations building which ts now being constructed there. Gregory S. Powell, also an assist ant director though the junior of CITY BRIEFS Wallace McMullen of I tending to busines matter today, . R. W. Munson, Lander t man, arrived in Casper Fr remain several days visiting tending to busne: fair of Denver in the city. . isiness | Jay and @ William J. spending the di F. C. Rossow, of the Richards and Cunningham company, has return from Wheatland where he spent vacation. is tt of Douglas was Ir erday J. Ralph 8 own on business yest Warren Dailey, st license in-| spector of Worland, spent yesterday in Cakper. of F. E. Mor spending the Ww business. Cheyenne 5 prosperous printing firm at Cheyenne is in the city on business, sd at Mr, and Mrs. E. BE. King of Rlv- erotn are spending the week-end in Casper. . Paul Stock, well known ofl opera- tor, accompanied by Mrs, Stock ar- rived in Casper yesterday. They will spend several days here visiting. eee Mrs, J, R. Dunbar, and Frank Barsch of Midwest aro visiting in the city this week, guests at the Hen- ning hotel. eee ward E. Lemon, well-known drilling contractor is entertaining his sister, Miss Ora Lemon of Pittsburg, Pa., for several weeks this summer, with Miss Bess McDonald of Scotts- bluff#, Neb, as a third member of ncaa FisCnten 3 J, B, Broden, R. H. Repath and H Yatson are among the Cheyenne ered at the Townsend hotel for the week-end. Rae Preece of Tulsa is spending several days in Casper attending to business affairs. . oe G. Prather of Salt Creek is visit- ing in Casper today eee W. E. Buck of Salt Creek is spend. ing the day {n the city on business. cee R. Coddingham and W. H. Codd- ingham of Denver are in Casper to- day on one of their frequent visits in this city. . J. H. Johnson of Sheridan spent | yesterday in Casper on business. | eee A, M. Etter and L, W. Crew are n Casper on | Mr. Shaw, and Robert B, Carron, safety inspector, will have oNXces | in the building Mr, Shaw has been with the Mid in his pr capacity since January 19 Up to this time he sent with General I rector of ind rke H trial relatio company. Gen Sinclair said yesterday that it was thought advisable to have | a special building in the oil fields to | house this department and to take care of the many problems that arise. TWO KILLED IN LATE ROBBERY AT SIOUX CITY SIOUX CITY, Iowa., Aug, 22.—{As. | ated Press)}—Two men are dead 2 missing from the s hardware store as sult of a mysterious shooting. When C. A. Larson, proprietor of | the store unlocked the door this morning, he found his clerk William Laugerson, and an unidentified man lying fatally wounded on the floor, Natives Are 1 Slaughtered : By Fanatics CAPETOWN, Sea Africa, Aug. 22.—(By The Associated Press)}— A dispatch from [lizabethville, Bel- gian Congo, says that religious fan- atics in the neighborhood of Sakania, attempting to make forcible conver, WAT AUGUST APPLES. By Barbara Brooks. If someone should ask you what foods you consider typically Ameri- can, applie pie would’ undoubtedly receive honorable mention. Pio is a favorite dessert and apple pie tastes especially good when made from the early apples. We have often won- dered which apple ple {s eaten for, the filling or the crust! Probably it ig the delectable combination ‘of the two which appeals to us—and you have only to watch dessert orders in any restaurant to know how strong is this appeal. The flavor of early apples is good in sauce, too. Wash the*fruit and cut it in quarters, removing the cores. Add water and cock until the appeals are soft. Rub through a coarse sieve, sweeten with brown sugar and flavor with cinnamon. Add a little salt if desired Have you ever prepared apple sauce shortcake? Make a dough from a rich baking powder mixture. Bake, split, butter and put hot spiced sauce between the layers and over the top. Serve with maple syrup thickened with one tablespoon of flour to each cup. The following cake and pudding recipes include apple sduce. They are delicious especiaily at this sea- son of the year. Apple Sauce Cake. 1% cup shorttening, 1 cup brown sugar. 1 cup raisins. ¥% cup currants. cup all-bran. cup apple sauce. cups flour. teaspoon soda. teaspoon salt. \% teaspoon cloves. % teaspoon cinnamon. 1 teaspoon ginger. Cream shortening and sugar. Add raisins, currants, all-bran and apple sauce. Then flour sifted with soda, salt and spices, Beat well. Bake ANNUAL FISH FRY 1S PLANNED SEPTEMBER 8 BY COSMOPOLITAN CLUB The Cosmopolitan club's entertain- ment committee met yesterday at the Townsend hotel, and completed Plans for their First Annual Fish Fry. The members will go out in pairs on Sunday and Monday, Sep- tember 6 and 7, to catch the finny monsters, and the fry and dance will be held at the Townsend on Tuesday night, September 8. Five prizes will be awarded in the fishing contest among the members, the awards to take place during the evening. A splendid program will be arranged for the dinner hour, The club hag recessed for the sum- mer, but will have luncheon on the first Wednesday in September (Sep- tember 2) and every Wednesday thereafter. The club has taken care of a number of defective children during the summer, and will con- tinue their workin this line for the 1 1 1 1 in greased tin in moderate (350 degree Fahrenhett). Corn Flake Charlotte. 2% cups corn flakes. 2 cups sweetened apple sauce Rind of % lemon. % orange or lemon. a buttered baking dish spread a layer of rather finely broken corn flakes. Cover with a generous por- tion of apple sauce and add fruit juice and rind. Top with corn flakes dotted with butter. Bake for fifteen minutes in hot oven (400 degrees Fahrenheit), Servo with whipped cream, oren eee Bad Accused in Plot to Kill Coolidge Norman Klein, under arrest in Tampa, Fla., on anarchist charges, is accused of threaten- ing the lives of President Cool- idge and Henry Ford. Denver Dairies Face Charge Of Forming Trust DENVER , Colo., Aug clated Press.)—Foster Cline, district attorney, filed direct informations in West Side criminal court here today charging four individuals and four large dairy companies With conspir. acy to violate s anti-trust laws. The action followed an in crease of two cents a quart in the price of milk in Denver, which was effective August 1, last, 22.—(Asso- e. the stat “World’s Greatest Buy” The Essex Coach PAGE THREE FIRST BATTLE” MUSEUM OPENS IN OLD ROME Chamber of Old Papal Fort Set Aside for Exhibit. that history, NEW | strange warlike um like the » Tower of rlin, that told 22.—It seems with all her never had a es in Paris, on, the Arsenal in battle flags and battle weapons of the numerous ars in which old Rome and Italy ve engaged down the years. But ne ccording to a dispatch n the N k Times, the start has beer and the most pie turesque inder of stirring days in Re been selected as the ple numerous trophies are to be and placed on hibition. This place, standing since 140 A, D. is the Castel : Angelo or Hadrian’s Mausoleum— that graceful round fortress that towers above the yellow Tiber, hard by the huge cathedral of St. Peter's and almost abreast of the compara tively white Palace of Justice . has in Invalid where these mart In a lofty of this. old already been hundred ‘ been through many Infantry regiments represented 136 flags, the, cavalry by 19 are nine banners of Bersag ments and fifteen of the amous hard-fighting Ardif, that Roosevelt to read about. Every flag in the collection has had authentic battle service and most them show their wounds in ho and tatters Nearly : collected last and gray spacious chamber fort have nearly twe that have a bloody fight are 1 of the emblems so far are those used within the century—carried by troops in which preceded Italy's unifica- under Victor Emmanuel II These banners must seem very to the brooding walls Sant’ Angelo, which has the banners of contending fight before it for over 1,500 seeing even its own statues hurled by Romans against Goths—in the days when glory was Rome's Sm watched SAN JUAN PORTO RICO—Retail stores have closed !n protest against the sales tax and merchants. have appealed to President Cool(dge te dase aR aS BOBBED HAIR looks wondertul with the tiny tint Golden Glint Shampoo.—Adyv $945 Delivered Immediate Delivery. HOW WOULD YOU LIKE sions, slaughtered fifty natives in one village. A small patrol of native police was driven off with a number ot killed or founded TO BE A PHYSICIAN? ) Most men have certain hours that are theirs. They use them as they see fit. Some spend them in various forms of recreation with their families. In these periods, it is seldom that any one feels free to intrude on either business or professional matters. ' What about our physicians? Did you ever think of them and won- der when they had their leisure hours? When they spent an evening with their children or had a night with their families? Probably not. Have you ever noticed that at most every public place you go there comes a call for Doctor So and So? We know of doctors who during al! of last winter did not get an evening at home. These same men answered hundreds of calls at all hours of the night. Why? Because of the gmall fee they would get for their services? No! Emphatically no! The physician is no more anxious to get out of a warm bed on a win- ter’s night or to leave a family gathering or a good show simply for a fee than your merchant or grocer would be to be called at the same hour and Under the same circumstances to make a small sale. The physician is just as human as any of us. Yet he is bound by custom, tradition and honor to answer the call of the sick wherever and whenever the call comes. We repeat—How would you like to be a physician? It is impossible to place an accurate estimate on the value of our physidian’s service. Certainly the relief afforded an anxious father or mother when a sick child is aided in the middle of the night can not be figured in monetary value, Our physicians are serving us faithfully day and night. Is the value of such services appreciated? We must say no. Because it has been shown that less than 10 per cent of our physicians’ calls are paid when the call is made, over 75 per cent of the calls are not paid for within 30 days; nearly 50 per cent are not paid for at least 60 days and 25 per cent are not paid for within three to six months. Considering the anxiety of all concerned when the physician is called; the promptness and faithfulness with which he responds and the character of the service rendered is it fair to your physician to delay payment longer than the first of the month? Much of this work is neces- sarily of a charitable nature. Certainly those who can, should pay promptly. Think it over!