Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, August 30, 1925, Page 3

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SUNDAY, AUGUST 30, 1925 POWELL REGION EAPS BENEFIT PAGE THREE Che Casper Sunvay Cridune “UOT ‘USH WOqrV It peonpozjUy sv '+ COMING TO RIALTO Whether We Like It or Not! | with | chamber music accompa in AND CONCERT SEASO tt te cmaues, ney Sommy 3! GLOGED; ORGANIZATION she published a string quartette and ' 1 | . is also the author of two publication Milo’s Mi ich, ¢ &) Maxine Mila carries @ saxophone} “Impressions that Remained { ree-day ¢ t the i: alto] With=her and gets out of tt har-/1919, and “Streaks of Life,” in 1921, oy pe ny|™onles that reflect musical talent | Hor principal recreation {s golf. — t iia mei utdnked o! iee degree coupled with long . : ‘ {ts weekly cdnoert at the practice, Miss Jane Manner of New Yartc ts] park Thursday night, the ca von has bron ob-| Unique tn the way of vocal work|a voice trainer. She does not, teach | ey i osed F d D ee saree © great} {s that of Rene Vincent, the singer|women to sing, but {s trying to 2 mag Ste a Sh t is being off an] with two voices, The playing of a|/eliminate some of the nasal quality | were é ction 6 arms ani ines Show n beside lar} cornet and plano at the same timelof American voices, to show women | Willian saphena: R 5g tilm progr is the contribution to the program |how to make themselves eastly un-| contract wit ie Large eturns in One o outstandin ubers | of a member of the band and orches. | derstood and to improve the quality | <tis chat the bead cen met teen Ri h D; x of Milo rels {s Ewert | tra who choose: © Known only of feminine speech. 1 ; exiwithout ‘Suid 1c strict. and his $ lano a rdion. Mrjas “Olive”. C Milo, concert without The : Ewert, it i 1, has command of | pianist, has some numbers that ar€] Jeanne de Bard, alx years rea! bis instru which |s rare and| certain to please, it is declared by| 168 Angeles, ha ation ; Bae 2 anh Ce his perfornance fits {)) well with a| those who have heard-him. addi: | tation ee ap te powbitHetiea ted ppner iti Sinaiig series of other» which make up this | tion to this there will be some funny |on tha birth and life c pes) wna AES nF ror erin Geteestalpisske sina thas part of the show. end men, dancers and other artists. istory,” sala°T. E. Keefer, superin- tendent of the Ells Basin field in {idwest Refining company opera- ns. o ae TERM OF COURT BEING SUMMONED FOR DUTY Mr. Keefer is intensively enthu- jastie over the entire Basin region ind declares that in another few “tears that section will have so far dvanced in agriculture and dairy- al Park. Dame Ethel Smyth sition at the Hochschule, then conductor of Bach Verein at Leipzig. She was a militant suffra- Berlin, ae In the printing trades more than 20-per cent of the workers are wom en, while in the men's clothing and England's most famous, woman musle composer, Dame Ethel Smyth, ng as to make it one of the most has followed in the footsteps of Rich. gist and among other suffrage music prosperously conducted communities > composed “The March of the Wom-|textilo trades women average about n the state. ard Straus and written an operatta| en,” the battle song of the Women's | half. inte \ VacbieIeT ane Dairying promises to be an impor- of the cormi{e type. It is a one-act | Social and Political Union. She was eee RrizdaS mencreteece nt factor In that section, according work entitled “Entente Cordjale,”| created Doctor of Music at Durham NOTICE yar Ay: Rash to Mr. Keefer. “The farmers of the and has been received with ovations | in 1910. I will not be responsible Nae bad Powell region are beginning to un- by the critics. This is not her first! Among her compositions are two} CMtracted by other than until’ der ; ¥ erstand the value of dairying and work of this nature, however, as in| symphonies, “Overture to Anthony. * SP. Sheriff Alex McPherson has } 1erds are being rapidly increased to 1915 she composed “The Boatswain's | and Cleopatra.” ‘A Mass," and* the ST busy the last few days « 3 keep up with the demand of the Mate.” Dr. M. C. Kelth moved to Rooms Latha following operas: ‘antasio,” which 7. 8, 9, 10, Stockmen’s N etive “ ona) Bank Castberg Creamery there, which is Dame Ethel Smyth {s a daughter|was brought out at: Welmar and] pujlaing. A heavy Waits t 2 iow furnishing to Casper alone as of the late Gen. J, H. Smyth, C. B.Jagain at Carlsruhe by Mottl; “Der a the « much as.300 pounds of butter daily She studied under Heinrich Van Her-| Wald," performed at Berl Best display of magazines at —————.- and can ship more if the dairy herds zogenberg, late professor of compo-! Wreckers,” at Leipzig. Her * Chappy' are increased. It is a spot cash re- turn to farmers and many of them appreciate its value. y = DOO ‘We have had the best potato = 1 \ \ fi rop in years and the price has ‘ \ eh Sr ENE “pS been particularly inviting. One VISA TS Ser farmer with whom I am acquainted ada return of $1,750 from a four- ve crop, which isn’t so bad. est is now’ being take ich also is a The Powell tract is one finger of the Shoshone trrigation project and vny of the farmers have diversified their crops so as to secure the best . Much of the hay ts co! gions. well received hoth in England and is Yi ® ita and Kansas City at excel. | America, He has also produced a H rice’ po ine On, small book of poems, “Hips and 1 lnwtae et ai re eG 5 ane Books and Their Writers. Maws,” and “The Black Dog.” shipped to Caspe Putnam's “haye just published eae Mr, Keefer just returned ° .."Sex At Choice,” by Mrs. Mon: anh tblp etbrotigh® Yellowstone Mainly About Books || icin reskine, a book which tells irae | « where he has been on a couple women the simplest way to regulate Fi { f ‘ ion. He was accom: | '———By “ARTEXUM”. the sex of their children. No mo- | 1 his mother, Mrs, N. J c ther should fail to read this book. 2 OLD YOUTH, by Coningsby Daw-| «+ * -R : j ¥ PIONEER iF W | ? | * ¢ - are here fo few 3 3 fobert Keable, whose re- ‘: | whic aio Tere/tensa(e™ | sou, pachak he taagesproontny | nits Sele ee eae E ARE NEWCOMERS COLONEL BYLLESBY Mrs Mrs Sullivan daughter of Lander Man Owns a Ww 7M nN Yi A\an\ \\us Y <td Nau) a OH <=, fh ae {iS Rare) i oy Book Corporation, New York. How can a.man know so much:of ut only a woman feelg? ‘This question ts often put to modern fic- tionists who write of feminine emo- It is one of the great myster- and it is demonstrated afresh tion. ies, preferably, however, in warm re- is pliced {n the. South Seas, writes from Tahiti that he is starting for a wandering trip in Asin. Likely he will be gone six months, visiting ‘Mongolia, and especially conduct- ing certain first-hand researches in to Buddhism as practiced today. In and “Pinch Me,” appeared, and was DISTRICT, DEAD AT 72, WHEAT: D, Wyo., Aug. 29.— "8. Try Tribune Want in this community and wefwant you to know :. something about us! | Introducing the BYLLESBY Organization —_— A was a man of intense industry, broad , vision and high ideals.’ Ads for Result ———— OOOO ONION OMNES { ~ . in Coningsby Dawson's book, “Old|a letter, also written from Tahitt. Winfield Scott Waln, pioneer res- : Slate i Use For Youth” Keable tella G. P. Putnam of his| ident of this section for the past 52 Ou < h bi rye talk ** ~ .——"_q" i < Tn thle new moval ate, Dawson|tiereey aittues as follows, “T for | Years, passed away after a” ahort ti habit is to He believed that b 3 analyzes with skill and sympathy} 8°t to teil: you show. enormously, I ae “2 eae tein Rina tighaeee i | y 3 of 72 years. Mr. Waln had returned Seven Generations LANDER, Wyo., Aug. 29.—F. R. nes of this city, has-a school slate the second blooming in the life of the widowed ove Greensleeve, wlio, at thirty-six, dares to hope for. ro/ mance, though youth has left her. The meeting with her girlhood lover: fo up in, the world. Last mail T re- ceived, (1), a nice letter from'a book- seller; (2), 2 request for my photo: graph for the library of a girls’ hich school; (3), an intimation t T had a few days before froma motor trip through northern Wyoming and sou- thern Montana, in the course of which he became ill, direct to the public, so that the people we serve will know what we ar ‘ grouping the engineer- ing, operating and OOOO : ry r wvtian been in the tantly since the revolt against. her, dead. hns;| been adopted. as the literary natron| | He was born. near Balnbridge } ncial requirements i 4 and has been used by °M! hand's family who expect from her] ofa class at an American univer-| ind. on June 6. 1853. In 1857 the * :. { erations of school clilldren. 3 eri ete, I feel vaguely that. Boston| family moved to Kaneas. While tryin: try Or nu rs roper- i ‘The slate in in very good condition, | ° Hfe-lons fidelity to chis memory | Fi; eta? they were there, the Civil war broke 8 to an ying one r < hough in recent years it has not en the strenuous service it had ears ago. On the wooden rim is carved the names of Barnett Jones, hh. F, Jones, J. G. Jones, IF, R. Jones, Y Jones, and H. R. Jones. The ‘oldest date is 1833 when the slate was first used by Miss Phoebe Hays, who became the first wife of S. E. Jones, father of F. R. Jones of Lan- der. Mr. Jones was the youngest and a meek acceptance of tjresome responsivilities which their more restive souls seek to escape; her defiauce to the stodgy little rules of conduct which have bound her ull now; her returning vivacity and soy—then the bitterness of thwarted expectations. ach step {s taken with Eve. And she wins your heart long before she wins her lover's. It is this lover's marriageable dau- ghter, Jacqueline, who first nearly ought to'be told.” The last refer- ence is due to the fact that In Bos- ton bis recent book, “Numerous Treasure,” was banned. * * * There was a hond of love between the Quinbys, but somehow the fa- ther and son drified apart. They came to the time when the boy could’no longer understand the man and the man could no longer under- stand the boy. Here !s a tragedy that continues to repeat itself, due out and the father joined the Union urmy, dying in battle, The mother and children remained in Kansas until 1866, and then returned to the old home in Indiana. In 1868, they moved to Iowa, where the mother bought a farm, on which Mr. Wain vorked until 1873, when he came to Wyoming, freighting for two years from Cheyenne .to poirfts in northern Wyoming. He was mar ried in 1880 In Towa. The couple to do. » We expect conclusions to be formed on per- formance—not on what ties, utility problems could be overcome by specialized ability — by men of talent, skill and experience whom the aN Na aN : : | you are“reading here Ul 5 on in the family and fell heir to It-| Wrecks, then saves, Eve's. happl.| partly to youth that does not under jin to Oo rdinary company, | He in turh wil pass !t on to his} ness, ‘The childless Eve has stand and age that expects too| established their home near here ' di : youngest-son/H. R. Jones of Fort | “ete. The childless Eve: bes a mors | toh, ‘William ‘Heyliger telle the | two. Yeara) later or later statements. standing by itself, could y ly a -- ~ = Washakie and in time !t will become the property of his youngest grand- son. story in Quinby & Son,” the Fa- ther and Son book. © * © Two books that should be rend by every- hbody—"“Ten Years After” and “The Reckless Lady,” both by Sir Philip Gibbs. ¢ © * A, EB. Coppard whose “Fishmonger’s Fiddle,” has just been published in this country | (*! by Alfred A. Knopf, left achool at | "'UNIM Tra SterInEN oy, the age of nine to begin earning a A. A, Mitchell and family, — own love affairs. Here Mr. Dawson illuminates the difference between the older woman's shy shamfast- ness in love and Jacqueline’s frank acknowledgment and lack of self- consciousness. Jacqueline as a character ts as well drawn as Eve. §0 is Eve's flirtatious sister-in-law, and also the French woman who knows no con- CARD OF THA? We wish to thank our friends especially Odd Fellows lodge, Bap tist church and employes of C. & N W. BR. R. for their kindness and sympathy shown us during our re- cent bereveament. Also for the neither find nor afford The Byllesby organiza- to employ. tion’ was founded in (1902 by . ang electrical engineer ,who_helped DODORADOOOOOS a i an aa a ca a a man a mae He foresaw how the whole public might be ventions, but follows the law of her| ving. For thirty years he wanker §. B. Mitchell and family, vora | ed £1 » clerical job to another, ——— PP cocoa soetoaties At | it rns Sec tstte tas ant S| nun dipag.oaeosce water construct, the first elec. well served at reason- riety-of t in the u tratum | devote himself wholly to literary | wilt be open for dipping on and a < sad h : Tf woclety nated Upon ty the mere | Work. Within. two years his book | arter September 15. Register tric power , house —t e able rates, a sound in- of short stories, “Adam and Eve primal of instincts, complicated by the checks and balances that cul- ture and reason make imperative. Most successfully does this novel give a “close-up” of one woman for being highly civilized. To ‘become an intimate, even if only in a book, | of a person like Eve is to have one's life enriched and one's understand- ing broadened. This character alone makes “Old Youth™ the most notable thing @ author of “The Cost of Folly, ‘The Kogdom Round the Corner,” and “The Garden With. out Walls,” has ever done, ichards & Cunningham Co.. Casper. es vestment provided for | investors and huge amounts of capital ob- tained to make these things possible. late Colonel Henry Marison Byllesby. Twenty-five years ago not many public utility companies were success- ful. The majority were poorly financed, inade- quately constructed and operated by men who failed to-understand their obligations to the Riding a girder is not a job for a nervous man. WT no,one is nervous by choice. There is a way that you may trengthen your body that the vous system will be cushioned ound muscles and flesh. But this condition will not come about unless yous have rich red-biood- cells, Red-blood-ceils are the most important thing in all the world to each of us. More red-blood- cells! That's what you need when your nerves give way and you can- hot control yourself. 8. will prove to you its “Why” and “How” reason. Since i826 §.8.S. has helped thousands. Because 8.8.8. does build blood power, it builds you up when you are run-down, clears the system of blood impuritie: routs 60 pica skin disorders—and stops leumatism, too. This is why 8.S.S. is accepted as the grentest of all blood purifiers, blood builders and’system strength- eners. Start taking 8.S.S, today. Its)’ medicinal ingredients are pure- ly vegetable. Your nerves will be- come stronger, you will have more energy, vitality and vigor and a more up and going appearance. 8.8.8. fs sold st all drag stores in two sizes. Tho larger size is. more economical, And as the corner-stone of the whole structure, he declared, the well- earned friendship of the public was an ab- solute, fundamental necessity. Sra a ca a ea em a aN ta a a aN a a a NN aN NA NN NN NY EN NN NN NN NN NN NN YN a Nn” THE PAINTED VEIL, by W. Somerset, published by The George H. Doran Company, New York. No one writes a so-called “society melodrama better than W. Somerset Maugham, and in “The Painted ell” he demonstrates again that he commands the materials. of drama. Wise in his won generation, he knows just what situation will coral mand attention, and from the mo- ment the reader begins his new book, all the tricks in his bags are in view, It has now been observed in many journals that the*opening scene, where two lovers watch a china door-knob turn slowly, won- dering meanwhile whether the lad: husband is behind the door, ts one of the most startling Introductions in recent books. One might add that for many years that with the high point, the climax of numerous novels; today it has sunk to the insignificance 6f an expository Incl- dent. Mr. Maugham always has enough surprises ready to hold the readers’ interest to the end. He deals again in exotic climes—China —but the principal love affairs are worked out in the Caucasians, The presence of a bacterlalogiat. and a plague puts the story in the mood of these times when we have taken to giving the scientist some share of honor in our novels. ‘The Paint- ed Veil should make such progress as a good book for winter reading. Lazy Dollars public. Such dollars belong to lazy or care- less persons. Money can work three times as hard as a man—24 hours a day—365 days a year. Your money in a Savings Account here works all the time. Start one today! The Stockmens Natl. Bank First Trust & Savings Bank Combined Capital and Surplus $225,000.00 Byllesby Engineering & Management Corporation Engineers and Mawagers for the Mountain States Power Company —_—_—_—_—_—KaKmns_—_ee Next Week “What Byllesby Told His Managers” 60 a

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