Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, September 19, 1925, Page 8

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—— SS eee is ar m ol PAGE EIGHT Brotherhood of American Yoemen Will Hold Meeting. The Brotherhood of A men will hold their ng tonight in the Kni the business mi il be giv eee can Yoe r meet >-ythias Trinity Lutheran Ladies Aid Will Meet. Literary Division Meeting Next Week. nour will n and pro. erested in the nd. f the Car. e, number 104, will en rs and thelr 8 o'clock at eee Pythian Sisters Will Hold Meeting The Pyth alty Tem- ple number 1 in regular session on tember Fe Current Events Division Will Meet Tuesday, ents division of the Departmental club day ‘afternoon at e Natrona County Cc. D, Murane in The current Miss Gl dys Loveland will leave for Boulder this ning, where she dies at the Uni Brady of Ris pending the day In ( ig friends and attending Heterodyne Was $267.00 Now $160 Complete Chas E. Wells Music Co. 232 E. 2nd Street Phone 194 $5.00 Reward Five dollars reward will be paid to the party furnishing the Casper Dally Tribune information leading to the capture of the person who ts fraudulently collecting subscriptions from Tribune subscribers. Patrons of the paper should not pay any one their subscription except the carrier who delivers the paper or d collector from the re not sure you are collector, ask him If he can the T Taléghoss 15 Jentlals. | Ralph | ness visitor in the cit | | n, are spend- sper on. busi- Mr, and Mrs. E. King are spending the weék-end in Casper from their! home in Rawlins. e Bake: Casper t on one of his fre- e Henning hotel rary T. B. He {s spend! from Chey s week-end. state humane few days in nne on business. . ppe and her son friends in home in man in C per yesterday. Mr. and Mrs. D. . Marcy were n Casper ay from | eh ess and Mrs, R. E. Booth of Mid- Mr. Thomas B, Wright, postmaster at | Riverton, is spending a few day in Casper t . J. R. Morrison of Basin, was a guest in Casper yesterday. cee Otto G. Plahn of Salt Creek, ts spending the day in Casper on bus- iness. eee George W. French, sheepman from Riverton, is a guest in Casper for the week-end. eee H. O. Barber, prominent business man and capitalist of Lander, is a guest at the Gladstone hotel this k while attending to business s In Casper. see S. K. Knight, jewelry salesman 2m Omaha, {s calling on his cus- ers in er this week. eee H. M. Peterson, commercial man from Chicago, was in Casper yes- terday on busines: cee L. E. Laird, state highway super- intendent, is spending the week-end in Casper. eee H. B. Carpenter, J. A., Cowall, 0. Diet M. Hobl and FP. D. Anderson, are among the Den- ver guests at the Townsend hotel this week-end see Cc. A. Whelan of Lusk a busi- REV, HOLWELL WILL PREACH SUNDAY AT EAST SIDE CHURCH The Rey. R. V. Holwell, assigned to the pastorate of the East Side Methodist Community church here, at the recent state conference in | Chey2nne, will preach his first ser- mons here tomorrow. At the morn- ing service at 11 o'clock, his sermon subject will be “The Maximum Life” and in the evening at 7.30 o'clock he will speak on “Under- standing Jesus.” ‘Mike’ Grant Back For Casper Visit Toss (Mike) Grant, formerly of the Tribune news staff and now on the copy desk of the San Francisco Chronicle, arrived last night from the coust city to visit his mother, Mrs. Roden Kingsmill, and friends in Casper. Mrs. Kingsmill may re- turn to San Francisco with him at the end of his vacation. Grant was Tribune for two duties. @ finds the 348 South Kimball St. VIOLI Studied under Dr. Des Moines IN under Orv Music, Belgium of violin, N York Cit as presented by of the present d. WADE H. CRAMER Mr. Cramer teaches the Belgian system of violin Phone 1468 TRUCTOR Arthur Heft, Dean of Highland Park College, under Hans Albert, world famous violinist and later e Musin, formerly head of Royal Conservatory of Musin is now director of the Musin School playing, Musin and Ysaye, two of the greatest violinists POWNSEND HOTEL TRAIN Westbound No. 603 . Eastbound NOADIS nds ncuctbadsedanssacl He p.m, CHICAGO, BURLINGTON & QUINCY Eastbound No. 82 No. 30 Ww CHEDULES CHICAGO & NORTHWESTERN Arriv. Departs + enna-=-1:30 p,m, 1:50 p. m. D. te 6:00 p. m. -+--8:10 p.m. CASPER TO RAWLINS STAGE CANS LEAVD DAILY AT 930 & M Savee you approsimately 12 hour travel between Casper and Rawlins WYOMING MOTORWAY. Salt Creek Transportation Company‘s Office PHONE 144 rmer mayor of Lusk, | R. 0. Fidler was a Grass creek } , Were visitors in Casper Friday. FARB—312.60 |) | Society i} | actor are shown. SENSATIONAL OFFERING FOUND IN FILM, “HELL'S HIGHROAD’ AT RLALTO Cecil B, DeMille, outstanding 4l- rectorial genius of the film Industry, has ly created another s¢ in “Hell's Highroad,” his first inde- pendent production from Producers Distributing compahy, which opens at the Rialto theater tods Leatrice Joy plays the part of the society girl who loves money not so much for itself but because of an honest conviction that it Is essentia! to happy married life. The man of her choice, played by Edmund Burns, falls to share this view, so the wo. man, thwarted in attaining her goal xy direct suasion, turns to subter- fuge. She gets wealthy man about town to place her husband-on the path to wealth. The idea turns out to be a boomerang. Infected by the money lure, the man now sets about to discard everything that does not contribute to his ambitlon— and that Includes his wife. Mr. DeMille has turned his tale deftly in showing how the penitent wife, conscious of her error of judg- ment, sets about to ward off this Catastrophe, and incidentally her 1, The situation has been used to good advantage in providing an- other DeMille “puncl that carries realism melodramie action. sational offering scene, along with the The conclusion one Children’s Pictorial ° Cross Word Puzzle | Word 1. t the little man tn | the picture has. Word 5. To glide along dren do this on the ice in winter. Word 6. A small roadside hotel. | Running Down. Word 2. A group of pcople who ire joined together in an organiza- tion, Word 3. To request. Word 4. A snake-like . YESTERDAY'S PUZZLE ANSWERED, Arrives ~6:50 a, m. Richard Bennett, famed actor, verse, twin sister of Mrs. Reginaid Vanderbilt, when she final divorce from James Converse, broker, it is declared in New York. Bennett, father of two actress daughters nearly as old as Mis. Converse, is said to admit it. He was divorced from his wife a few months ago after a “trial separation.” up to his reputation and} Cbe Casper Daily Cribune | Actor Richard Bennett to Wed Divorcee-to-Be, Report will wed Thelma Morgan Gon gets a Mrs. Converse and the is necessarily satisfying and carries with it its own lesson. => - | BY AILEEN LAMONT | right 1925. The Casper Tribune) EW YORK, Sept. 19.—The “wool ack” may be all right as a distin- guishing mark of English judges, but 4s a feminine adornment it has moved into the past. ‘The woolen ats now in vogue are far~ from sack-like, They haye the most per- fect fitting shoulders of nearly any feminine garment and range in price in direct proportion to the skill cf the man’s tailor who cuts them. The fur collar above the shoulders may be of the most_ex- pensive pelts, but. it does not re- deem a garment with the slightest sack-like tendency. Pin Feathers Above Pin Money Pin feathers, ostrict’ pin feathers, are especially adapted for ruffs and many costumes at present are in- complete without a ruff falling from the small hat and winding about the nec The neck encircled may be rough also, but the purchase price of the ruff goes far beyond pin money, Two In One “Have ‘em both.” That is the selling argument of milliners today to customers who hesitate between felt and velour for head coverings. Then they bring out an English hat with a felt crown, round and father high, with a velour brim that’ ts flexible enough so that it may be twisted into nearly any shape de- sired, Holding the Bag Leave her holding the bag. That {s sound advice it one is desirous of pleasing the modern woman, pro- vided the bag she holds is one of |the new large pouch-shaped recep- ot dé or satin with a metal frame. The flat enve- apes also maintain a dis popularity, however. In Two Pieces Luck, the} lways comes in two pieces... So do the most fashion- ble sports suits for fall. The Iat- ter are usually in two pieces of bal- briggan weave, This material adapts itself to every posture and move- ment and its resiliency leaves it unwrinkled and trim after elther a hard afternoon on the links or at (he veranda bridge table. NEW YORK, Sept. 19.—When it fomes to-evening gowns, cut will be | the first importance this winter, but tus does not mean cut prices. The | chang s from the present silhouette will be noticeable but will not be | abrupt. The woman in «moderate | circumstances who wakes up one | morning to find her wardrobe passe jis Ukely to disregard fashion’s de: mands and the changes in evening frocks Will be eased to her gen Green Hats, Whether "the green ha product of the pen of Michael Arlen, is a theatrical success or not at its New York permier scheduled for the near future, green hats will be popular on Park and Madison avenues as a head covering. Green {s vieing with boles de rose and the more ardent autumn shades as a millinery favorite, especially for the small hats. Spots Not Out. Any cleaner can take out a spot, the furrler who attempts to de- ve a customer of a single spot on 1 new African leopard skin coat de himself in trouble. One dealer empted to excuse a flaw in such at recently by declaring that it us the place where the deadly | bullet of the hunter got tn its work. “Give mo one that was poisoned,” was the reply of his customer. The new head of tho division of maternal and infant hygiene of. the United States children’s bureau at Washington, D.'t:,, is Dr, Blanche M. ‘Haines, who was formerly direc- tor of the Michigan bureau of child hygiene and public health nursing. The division of maternal and { fant hygiene is one of the four di- visions into which the children’s bu- reau of the United States department of labor is divided. The other three | are the employment of children and Industrial conditions in their effect upon children’s welfare; children in need of special ‘e—the dependent, defective and delinquent; and last, recreation and organized play, a com- parative department. The bureau of which Dr. Haines is head served tndividual paren throughout the country by prepar: tion of popular bulletins and leaf- lets on prenatal, infant and child care. The distribution of these bulle- tins has rapidly inereased during the years the bureau has been function- ing. Forty of the48 states are now co-operating with the national go ernment in this werk for the y fare of mothers and babies. Mrs. Jane Clark of Minburn, Iow: years old, believes she is tt youngest great-great-grandmother in the United States. Her daughter, Mrs. Charles Brown, also claims a record, as she is great-grand- mother at 55; Mrs. Claude Hain thinks she is the youngest mother, her daughter, Mrs. Clifford Hoover, 19, being the mother of a baby girl. The total ages of the five generations ts Only a little over 183 years. Mrs. G. M. Stewart (British) was the lone woman in the Grand Prix motorcycle classic at Paris, She and her husband set a new world’s rec- APPROVAL OF M. E. CHURCH UNION GROWS LINCOLN, Neb., Sept. 12.—(By The Associated Press.)\—The Nebras- ka conference of the Methodist Epis- copal church In session here voted 197 to 8 for a unification of the Methodist Episcopal church and Methodist Episcopal church South, Tke Nebraska conference also voted to admit laymen to the con- ference by a vote of 117 to 7. LOS ANG S, Cal., Sept 19.— (By The Associated Press.)\—The an- nual conference of the Methodist Episcopal church {n Southern Call- fornia, in session here, voted unani- mously in favor of unification of the Methodist Episcopal church and Metrodist Episcopal Church South. ATLANTIC CITY, Iowa, Sept. 18. —A vote in favor of unification of the Methodist Episcopal church and South was recorded here today by the Des Moines conference, which also voted to admit laymen to the annual conference of ministers. Dr. Blanehe M. Haines. ord on the Monterey track; covering 1,300 miles at an average speed of 54 miles an hour. , Estehr Blenda Nordstrom, Swedish writer, made a recent tour of the United States. She “jumped” freights, served as a waitress at sev- eral different types of eating estab- lishments, was a farmerette and “roughed” it generally, After her return to Sweden the accomplish: ment of which she boasted most was that of having learned how to take care of her own automobile. pssie Mae Randell, 2% years o has been preaching for three years. She has become the most ruccessful woman evangelist in the count having one of the largest congre tions in Santa Ana, Cal. She has received numerous proposals of mar- riago from all over the world, but ys she does not intend to marry. ‘My life work is to preach and save souls,” she declares. Miss Randell has started on a tour of the world to “carry her message.” ssecpeessS Names of Another Color. Colors have not changed since the days of Michael Angelo, but names have. Few clerks can now be found who can not and do not talk of shades such as amaranthe black, cuckoo, drapeau blue, bordeaux red, lies de vin, rose taupe, queen bird, waterspout green, tyrolean green, lettuee green and spinach green. Spinach is not fashjonable, but “it is so good for you" that the colorists could »not overlook it. > Two thousand stranded British seaman in South Africa are playing football while officers on the ship do their, own cooking. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1925 FLOOR LAMP POSTED AS PRIZE THS EVENING - AT RIVERVIEW PARK This evening at Riverview Park the management will award to some lucky patron of the night dance, a b 1 floor lam: given awa This pre- ation will be in connection with the big dance at the Mil ort this will make t second last appear- ance. A lady song bird will break up the regular music: ram with bits of jazz and bl. vai ale eet ts BANK BRINGS SUIT 10 COLLECT ON NOTES 19.—Col- t and| lection of $7,3 principal on s s given the} Platte Ce at Wheat: | and later endorsed over to the Citizens bank suits filed in th trict court Tue: Sheriff Ousted By Ross Capitalizes Recent Publicity Cheyenne , United States Dis- y afternoon. COPY, Wyo. Sept. 19.—A laun-| dry 1s being conducted, it is sald. in Powell, which is being operated under the firm name of R. Ouster Laundry, sald by mean when spelled ov oO is operated the late sheriff Wm. of county who was removed by ernor Ross several mcnths aso. this G Greece ts making plans to rebuild the Parthenon SERVICES: Sunrise Prayer Meeting Sunday School Preaching — _- Y. P. S. Meeting — Preaching — ie Midweek Prayer Meeting — Everybody come, tian worship in what is known Rey. C. L. Johnson, Pastor Coolidge upholds debarring of Sak latvala as necessary under the law. How does this great religious picture apply to the THE TEN COMMANDMENTS A Review of the Famous Picture-Play Are the Ten Commandments out of date in Wyoming? - First Church of the Nazarene CORNER 12TH AND POPLAR STS. Service Saturday night in Post Office Park at 8:00 True Americanism is shown by true worship with us in this pathway of life that we might be co- partners on the way to Heaven. GOOD MUSIC—SPECIAL SINGING GREAT CONGREGATIONAL SINGING people of Casper today? CHOIR FUND» IS MEMORIAL DENVER, Colo., Sept. 19.—my The Associated Press}—Announce. ment was made here that Pay L. Mayo, whose wife, Margery ye) Mayo, died May 25, has created cholr foundation fund in her mem. ory, and carrying her name. Tho fund amounts to, $60,000 which fs to 000 provide an annual income of $3 for the choir's suppotr. The fund 1s given to the Cath of the Immaculate Conception, a R man Catholic church here. Sei nn Lloyd George {s campaigning Wales for assumption by the nation of control of all farm land. —<$—> —_ Newspaper prizes for $1 and bills with certain numbers: Jecla illegal by postal department. ee 2 Caticura Treatment Keeps The Hair Healthy Before shampooing anoint the scalp with Cuticura Ointment, let- ting it remain on over night when possible. Then shampoo with a suds of Cuticura Soap and warm water, Rinse thoroughly. A clean, healthy scalp means good hair. Soap te. Olutments and ie. ererymhere. 5 SSkticere EXB— Cuticura Shaving Stick 25c. Phone 369-M | 0 p. m. Giris: as a Christian nation, Come Rey. ‘A. E. COOKE will preach on above subject in First Congregational Church (AMERICA THEATER) at 11 A. M. Sunday SPECIAL MUSIC B Y REORGANIZED CHOIR DIREC MRS. BERTA SMITH TED BY On Sunday Evening at 7:30in ODDF ELLOWS’ HALL The:subject will be THE MAN WHO WAS RUINED BY REAL ESTATE MEMBERS OF THE CASPER BOARD OF REALTORS SPECIALL Come and hear these vital messages for the present day. YOU will be welcome, Y INVITED

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