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MADAME WHO AT HA i By INSTALLMENT ~-WHO's WuHo. . Jeanne Beaufort, daughter of « Vir- ginian, swears vengeance against the North for the deaths of her father and two brothers in the Civil War. She is enrolled as spy for the Con- federate government and instructed to ‘use the miles of her sex to bring Parson John Kennedy, Union spy within the power of the ‘South. Dis- covered in the act of spying upon the group of Secret Service agents of whom Kennedy is the leader, Jeanne 4s. given tho alternative of death or marriage to one of their number. They Gro all masked, but Jeanne re- jects one volunteer and chooses’ an- other of the eleven as here “husband. To herwelf, she calls him Irony. Par- eon Kennedy performs the ceremony and the bride and groom, ignorant of each others names and she not even ‘mowing what he looks like, sign the marriage certificate as “Mary Smith” and “John Jones.” As witnesses the group sign as follows: John Kennedy, D. D. CWG-L UTE { ~WG-A F-WG-8S H-RD-M PPAG I-NEI-P pear. ~--Henry Morgan Southern officer! anc spy for the Confederacy is in love with her but she rejects his ad- vances. One day getting a letter signed “your identity is known. Dis- guilsing herself with a brown wig and staining her face, Peanne assumes the name of Alice Trent, ehe goes to Baltimore to carry on her work. She is unawere! that a real “Alice Trent” Inves in Baltimore. dohn Armitage, a Union officor, rescues Jeanne from a drimken mah. Jeanne induces Morgen to abduct’ Kennedy ‘so that she may “question him about the names on the certifi- cate and about a curious tattoo mark on the arm.of the man she married. Armitage rescues him, but Jeanne, escapes, She sees placards, announc- ing a reward for her capture, “dead or alive.” father of the them, ig captured. Though she {sin boy's clothes, Captain Armitage re- cognizes her, but says nothing, and is ound to face a firing squad in the morning. Officers flied out sravely, the ,4 General's son along with them. All those carefully laid plans gone ke a puff of smoke! But it was cer- tain jn tho minds of them all that nothing on God's earth could prevent a@ firing squad at sunrise. Captain Armitage entered his tent calmly enough; but once there he fell to pacing. By and by he snuffed: the candle. : "The spy lay quietly, wasting no ef- fort at the bonds, tied none too gent- ly. The guard paced back and forth end occasionally paused to glance fn- side the tent. Hour after hour went PeAE midnight tbe spy heard a rather ‘unusual sound at tho rear of the tent. It was a whispering sound, as of one crawling over grass, * Presently a strange hand worked at the ropes. ‘There came a fatnt yf tesl hey hear me talking to the guard, io. out at the rear. Make straight for the river. The way is fairly clear.” ‘The whisperer felt his hand being caught by two small ones. He drew it dack quickly, for the kiss had the feel of hot lead. T about midnight Captain Arm!- tage had stopped to question him. Just before that he had looked into the tent and the spy was yet there. ‘When General Armitage returned to ‘his tent, he found his son. “Ah, John,” ‘sald the father, fling- Ing, his glvoes down violently, “all these plans gone to pot in a night. Damnation! Spies outside end trait- ors within! In God's name, how can ‘we end the war when such things ex- det” “T am the traitor, Father,” said the jutetly. ooRvbat's that?” The General leaned cross the table. his mouth open, his eyes at thir widst. “I freed the spy.” “You? My son?” “Yes. But before you give any or ers, Father—” “Say Sir! came quickly through the lips of the man opposite. “Before you give any orders, sir, T ‘want you to hear the rights of !t, such as they are" “Rihts? Did you stve the spy hts information. too?” “No sir. When the spy sald to search him after he was dead, did not the strangeness of that request strike ‘you, sir? It was a woman.” “A woman!” The General stepped back, “You say a woman?’ "Yes, sir. a woman, 4nd if you will permit me to exp'atn, sir, the explan- ation will be short.” “There was no would be your natural Thie ig why I released her." Intrigue, euch as supposition. Ang f MacG MAN ON OLD FY ~ THE NO. SEVEN. hglefly the son recounted what had taken. place ona certain night in Richmond. “Sir, J was one of those men, and she was the woman.” “Go to your tent and consider your- self under artest. You're no son’ of! mine henceforth.” 1 eset Jeanne Beaufort climbed -eshore she knew now and un- derstood he had saved her because he ‘had recognized her, not as Alice Trent but as the Jeanne Beaufort who had faced alone the anger of eleven men. He was the. man who had stepped forward that night and offered to marry her to save her life. She knew that he loved! Five days later Jeanne was serv: ing tea in a drawingroom in Wash- ington. Everytime the bell rang her heart leaped wildly. She feared to see Armitage; yet inconsistently she longed to see him. She craved to know if he-would recognize in “Alice Trent’ the woman of the loft, tho cabin and the tent. One day he appeared in muft! with jan officer unknown to her, a Lieuten- ant Lowell. Shrewdly she watched Armitage and her covert scrutiny fi- nally Convinced her that he harbored not the slightest suspicion that “Alice Trent” and the woman he had saved Were one and the same, They were at war, he on the one side and she on the other. , . God was a just God, but nevertheless He had H's Playful ironies. She loved a Yankee! ‘When Armitage and his friend left the house they walked along in silence for a while “Well?” said Armitage finally. “She is all you say, John, and more. But if I possessed your turn of mind, I'd fight shy of her.” “That's my intention. What would you have done in my place?"” “Where?” “Where?” “Jeane Beaufort.” “Oh. -Well, since you ask, I'd have got-up withthe firing-squad. It's a jevil-ef a mess you've got yourself in. Here you are, guilty of a treasonable act, meriting court-martial and long imprisonment. Your dad has disown- ed you. And who could blame him? ‘You are at Ifberty today because the whole organization stood back of you. ‘You’re on probation; so id how you walk. You'll never convince those who don't know that you. didn't have an intrigue with that woman. Your fa- ther turned you over to the govern: ment—e pretty brave thing to do, Have you been to see Kennedy yet?’ ““No. TI suppose I ought to.” “Go to his rooms now. Tell him you thank’ him. ‘Without his‘aid you would have faced court4nertial. ‘He's not always clear in the upper-story; for he’s had a tough time of tt, and it left jts mark. “All right. T'll go over and have u talk with him.” INNEDY did not seem particular- ly Blad to seo Armitage. “Son, there's only one real question I'm going ‘to ask you,” he said. “Did you know this Jeanne Beaufort that night in Richmond? Had you moet her before?” “Good Lord, nom “Well, for a while you will be un- der my orders. Watch that rogue Morgan; follow every woman he speaks to. In other words, find th's ‘woman you let go; find Jeanne Beau- fort.” of bea old plantation home of the Beauforts was ike the run of its kind. The kitchens were under a sin- gle story. The shelving roof ran up to the windows of the wing, to the spare bedrooms. Upon the shingles lay the figure of a man and from ‘the corner of his eye he watched the near- est bivouac fire. By and by taps sounded, and the man entered the gar- ret and dropped to sleep, Jeanne had returned home to find that her father's regiment, with oth- ers, was quartered at the plantation for the severer months. She was de- lighted. Jt puts wings to depressing thoughts; {t gave her physical as well as mental occupation. It was Uke olden times to seo these bright-faced young officers about. with their exag terated compliments, the courtly airs which the Northern- ers lacked. Tonight she sat at the plano. The younger officers were gathered about her. Tha older members of tho staff sat about the table talking {n sub- dued tones. They, too, ‘had insisted that she play and sing, while they puttered over maps which were growing smaller and smaller. The entrance of an orderly inter- rupted the song. “Sir, I have to report that Sentry Jennings found this pair of shoes at the end of his beat. They were warm | D) when he found them, sir.” Instantly Jeanne and her admirers gathered about the table. A general took up the shoe and looked it over carefully. “Made by the Yankee government,” ‘was his comment. “Army shoes,” taid Jeanne. “More than that, they are officer's shoes.” All except the general looked at her tn wonder. “You are right, Miss Beaufort,” said he, coming to her rescue “It s'gni fies that we have an unwelcome guest hereabouts. The next thing is-to find | | ? him. Mann; will you see the proper orders are given to prevent this Yan- | kee from getting out of our lines?" All except'the general looked at her in wonder, “You are right, “Miss Beaufort said he, coming to her rescue. “It sig- nifies that we have an unwelcome guest -hereabouts, The next thing is |to find him. Mann, will you see t! proper orders are given to prevent this Yankeo from’ getting out of our | ines?" | “Yes, sir!’ The young officer ran |from the house. ‘The general put the shoes upon the table and rose, The rest of the staff rose with him. Presently Jeanne was alone. © With her “arms folded across her bosom, she bent her gaze upon ‘the shoes,| mute witnesses of a Yusiness she | knew only too well. Somewhere in| jcamp there was a man in stockingod feet. They were stout shoes, but. at the same time they Were small and shape- ly. The muck, which was still damp upon them, made. manifest that the owner had come across the river be- low the plantation; for at» the north of the camp the soil was firm and rocky. i From the south! What did that mean? A slight shiver wrinkled her spine. ‘There was ever that fear in| her heart that some day she would (Meet one man in the pursuit of his iduty. What would happen when that ,dreaded moment came? He was in his stocking feet. A man. did not wander about a camp in that fashion. He was somewhere! within the house! This knowledge; |came a8 a shock. ; A Yankee spy, an officer was hid-} jing under her roof! Her first im- | pulse was to seek the general and dis-| jclose to him her discovery. Then the old weariness and distaste bore down her, Lately she had executed her mii sions loyally, with the same care and shrewdness as. heretofore; -but ‘the passionate hate was gone. A Yankee was still a human be'ng. (Copyright, 1922, Bell Syndicate, Inc. ther Fine Iastullment Tomorrow. THE LONG CHANGE IS FILM FROM P. 8, KYNE'S STORY; WALTHAL STAR “The Long Chance™ presents Ralph Graves under the Universal banner at the Wyoming theatre today and Monday, in one of the most interest- ing portrayals of his career, and per- haps the performance most similar to the work he did for Griffith in “Scar- let Days” and ‘Dream Street.” “The Long Chance” is an all-star picture from a Peter DB. Kyne story, filmed in a vivid fashion, yet with every role a distinct characterization. Henry B. Walthall, Marjorie Daw, Ralph Graves and a half dozen other celebrated players have tho principal roles. H— NOTICE OF SALE Notice is hereby given that by virtue of an execution issued out of the District Court of the Sixth Judicial District within and for the County of Natrona, State of Wyo- eh in favor of the ie) alban x Company, a corporation, plain- tiff, vs. Roy Williamson, defendant, dated December 20, A.D. 1922, J.{1a L. Marquis as Sheriff within and for Natrona County, Wyoming, has, by virtue of said writ, levied upon 250 shares of the capital stock of the Five Tribes Petroleum Com- any, a corporation, and further levied upon 2,362 shares of the cap- ital stock of the Blackstone Salt Creek Oil Company, a corporation, and further levied upon 900 trust shares and 675 shares of the capital stock of the E. T, Williams Oil Company, a ‘corporation, the ersonal propert-s of the said endant, Roy Williamson, and situa- ted in Natrona County. Notice is hereby given that on the 15th day of January, on We 1928, at the hour of ten o'clock a. m. at the south front door of the court house of Natrona County, st Casper, Wyoming, the undersigned; Sheriff will sell said personal prop- erty of the said Roy Williamson at public auction to the highest bidder for cash to satisfy said execution and -all costs. PERRY A. MORRIS, Sheriff of Natrona County, Wyoming. Dated January 8, 1923, & LOWEY. Publish January 3, to 18, inclu- sive, 1923. ate ANNOUNCEMEN Casper, Wyo: a | lanuary 6, 1923. | The Anna Bell Wyo. Oil Co, will hold a meeting at the County Court House on Monday, the 8th. at 7:80 o'clock and especially invite all stockholders to be present. Impor- tant business matters coming up for discussion, W. E. PATTON. Publish January 6, 7 and 8, 1923, de-| th BETS ON FILM PAIDTONIGHT? Will Press Agent Draw Manager Todd in Buggy After Rialto r Showing? | All Casper promises to be on the sideline tonight when some of the notable bets made in connection with the showing of the Paramount pro- duction “To Hare and To Hold” at the theatre, are paid. _ Immediately after the first show, in the audience can truthfully 6 that “To Have and To Hold” is not the best picture which has been shown in Casper this season. : ‘That there might not be any mis- take about the said press agent doing as he has promised, Todd shrewdly removed his clothes, money and all earthly possessions and he is now waiting the hour of the final judgment, a prisoner to his friends. Everyone buying an adult admission will have the right/ vote and if there is one dissenting vote says Mr. Press Agent; he will have to haul Mr. Todd from the Rialto to the court house in a little buggy, also kiss every old maid in the city and purchase every baldheaded man a toupec. Mr. Press Agent still maintains he has a cinch bet. His only appeal is for a fair deal, but it may change to an appeal for-mercy before another day has rolled alon: “To Have and To Hold,’”* it is con- ceded ts one of the very big produc- tions of 1922. It is classed along with “Robin Hood,” “The Prisoner of Zen. 4 “Manslaughter,” |“Blood and Sand” and “The Old Homestead. Betty Compson and Bert Lytell, are supported by an all-star cast. ae | | | | | J.P. McGowan Is Director of Rail’ Picture And Star | J. P. McGowan hag always stood! without a peer as a director of rall- road melodramas. It has been some- time since he has made a railroad thriller, and it is therefore with un- usual pelasure that the Wyoming! theatre presents “Reckless Chances,” Tuesday and Wednesday, the film J. P. McGowan directed and is the star of, A picturization of Anthony W. Coldewey’s story, “Reckless Chances” is said to be packed from beginning | to end with action that speeds along | the unfolding of a real plot in which a man risks every reckless chance for the love of a girl, tt HEALING CREAM | STOPS CATARRH Clogged Air Passages Open at Once—Nose and Throat Clear If-your nostrils are clogged and your head stuffed because of catarrh or a cold, get Ely’s Cream Balm at any drug store. Apply a little of this pure, antiseptic, germ destroying jcream into your nostrile and let it penetrate through every air passage of your head and membranes. Instant relief, How good {t feels. Your hed ts clear. Your nostrils are open. You breathe freely, No more hawking or snuffling. Head colds and catarrh yield like magic. Don’t stay-stuffed up, choked up and miserable. Rellet is sure.—Adv. Beseccnt SSeS NOTICE OF PROBATE OF LAST WILL AND TESTAMENT OF RAYMOND ROUAN, DECEASED, To Edward F. Rouan, Mary Eliz- ;abeth Wheeler, Katherine M. Rou- jan, Dorothy M. Rouan, Ida M. Rou- an, Rose V. Rouan, and Jean Rou- an, and Carrie Fort, and to whom it may concern, heirs and divisees at ‘w of Raymond Rouan, deceased. Notice is hereby given, that Carl H. Anderson did, on the 2nd day of January, A. D. 1928, file with the Clerk of the District Court of the Sixth Judicial District of Wyoming, sitting within and for Natrona County, his petition in writing) praying the Court for Letters Tes-| tamentary be issued to the said Carl, H. Anderson, as Executor of the! Last Will and Testament of the said Raymond Rouan, deceased, and that said eaten is set for hearing by; ie Court on the 22nd day of Jan- uary, A. D. 1923, at the hour of ten o'clock A. M. of said day, or as soon thereafter as the same can be heard, at which time and place the said last Will aforesaid will be ad- mitted to Probte and Letters Testa-| mentary issued unless proper and legal objections be made thereto. | aved this 2nd day of January,| A. D, 1923. HAZEL CONWELL, Clerk of the District Court of Na- trona County, ~ ,oming. Publish Jan. 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10,'11, 192 i Let’s Have a Moving Picture Star From Casper WATCH FOR HER Adventure Film At Wyoming Last Of Present Week Herbert Rawlinson is coming to the Wyoming theatre Thursday and Friday in “One Wonderful Night.” The photoplay is said to be filled with startling ‘adventure, dashing romance, and tense mystery. { Rawlinson will be supported by Lillian Rich and others of talent in the field of photodrama. The story is taken from the novel by Louis Tracy, an author who can be depended on to give an interesting story. It deals with the many things that happened to a young man in a single night of adventure. Daredevil Rider Gets Crop From Film Admirers hi al leaning towards law. the career dear to my heatt. not throw custard pies.” sti Madge Bellamy, who. plays the lead in Thomas H. Ince's hilarious screen version of “The Hottentot,’” has been presented with a silver-tipped riding crop by the “suicide troupe,” a group of eighteen riders who appeared. with disastrous results in the spectacular steeplechase in the picture. Miss Bellamy does some clever rid ing tn the film and manages to stay on all the time, which {s more than the eighteen could achieve when they went over the jumps in the steeple. chase. Besides an eighteen-foot wa. ter jump, the course, which was specially prepgred by experts for the film picture, Incinded twenty-three other jumps over fences, hedges, alls and artificial barriers. ameras caught some astound. is'’ when the riders, one after another, went down to defeat in their effort to break speed records on the th a se going Into law. on the bench." rear of thelr first offer, but Bill was adamant. departed without not lost hope, however. an average one offer a week to assume the role of the jolly fat man, with whom the world laughs. OTS IN C WILL BE THROWN OPEN TO) PUBLIG SALE JANUARY 10 requirements of such a cinema char- the whole world since the bginning. fcter, ‘They came to Buffalo to see cupia, | he is registered at the university as| the William Roth, and to put him through is paces. Acting on the principle the Yatter the man, the more desirable) he was weighed and Bill was not found wanting. Roth says ho was ways fat, as far back as he can remember. “I was fat when I wore pinafores, I was fat when I wore knickerbockers, and now in a tuxedo I bulge over! more than ever.”* e | The magnates offered Cupid a fat contract. ” And what an accumulation, infinite variety of forms it . What an} presents!” British writer exclaimed. At times." added Tho Tlegraph,” as | for instance, in his’ rendering of} Beethovens “zn Questa Tomba Os-| cura,” the genius of the great basso | “stands out black and grim like an| | tdelent rock which has been slowly | ‘gathering its formation for ages.”| (Then, in Grieg’s “An Old Song” it| appeared “as a healing lake, wide and | deep enough to hold the muititudin-| ous tragedies of life.” Again, in| Rimsky-Korsakoff’s song, “The Pro-| WH |and he stands by himself as the ora- tor among singers. Whatever song he sings, ho drags its emotion from the very depths and makes a purple patch of it. When he is a taar, or® Prophet, or a prisoner, or a decelveit husband, M, Challapin is a consum- mate artist.” He was in great voice, and throughout the bulk of the pro- sram gave his great concourse of supporters every reason to believe’ him, 2s they clearly did, one of tha. few unsurpassable singers of the day Qualified judges are unantmous or! the point that the most exacting testi to which @ piano may be subjected is” “No, sald Bill, with dignity. “I am/ Phet," it was transformed into “a! to sustain the voice of a singer. patted neh fhe fs Iam to some day sit They added another cipher to t! “No,” he reiterated. “I have a T shall follow I will Cupid's power of resistence was rong. The men from the filmland him. They have Bill gets on Sette i AREY DIVISION Lots in the Carey re-subdivision south of the East Side school will be thrown open for sale on January 10.| These lots lic between Fifth and Elev-| enth stre\ were laid out has been approved by The plat by which they @ city council, the chamber of com- merce, and the Realtors’ board, Arrangements have been made for beautiful boulevard leading to the| subdivision and for three parks. The ction is zoned according to an ex cellent system and is the first resi- course. The riders who were thrown | dential district in Casper to be so bought and presented the crop to|zoned. No house of less than $7,000 Miss Bellamy in admiration of her |Valuo can be built on any of the lots. horsemanship -after she managed to complete the picture without a single all, “The Hottentot,” written by Wille Collier and Victor Mapes, was Collier's greatest stage success. It tells tho hilariously funny story of a yachtsman, terrified of horses, who is mistaken for a famous steeplechas- er of the same name and finally forced to ride in a breakneck race. It will be shown at the America theater on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thurs. day. Fat Boy Offered Fat Film Job; He | Refuses to Roscoe, BALDWIN PIANO FOR CHALIAPIN, WONDER BASSO Feodor Chaliapin, who has cho: jthe Baldwin piano as the instrument | best suited to accompany his yolce, {s one of the foremost figures in the| musical world at the present time. As an operatic artist, he stands without equal, and upon the recital platform tion, Tecent triumphs in London. has won similar recogni- It 4s interesting to read of his ‘Supremacy in artistic achieve = |ment,” said The Dally Telegraph, of BUFFALO, N. Y., Jan. 6—(United| September 29, after Challapin's reap. Press.)—Efforts of movie magnates to| Pearance in London.” {s one of those find a suitable successor to Roscoo| mysteries of Ife which avold defini- tion and at the same time do not need them to/ it. Arbuckle, fat man formerly of the! silver screen, have caused turn their attention to a student of the University of Buffalo Joices in the title of “Cupid.” Word came to them of a wonder in who re-/ brow “These powers have been mightily isht together in Feodor Challapin. He ‘sn man in whom have accumu- lated the experiences, obesity who promised to fulfill all the one not merely of nd_one generation, but of —— Every Make of Record Plays on The Brunswick Come see this wonderful ine vention—the Brunswick Ultona which brings a// artists on ald makes of records into the home. Much of the widespread prefers ence for the Brunswick is due to this exclusive feature. CHAS. The E. WELLS MUSIC CO. 232 East Second Something You I am _particlularly well equipped to take care of all your dental wants. This is my second year in Casper and in that time I have built up the largest practice in the state of Wyeming and it is larger today than ever be- cause my detal work gives satisfaction. Perfect sets of teeth; finest gold crowns; finest gold bridegwork; beautiful fillings. CONSUL- TATION FREE. If you are contem- plating any dental work I will appreci- ate an opportunity to talk it over with you, 4th Floor O. S. Bldg. Expert of Painless Tooth Extraction DR. FRANK CARLL Should Know Tel. 564-J 3 wild, roaring wind, blowing about the | corners of the world and breathing a ‘ glorious strength.”” “Au theee things, wrote the great! | eritic, this great singer yielded to his| | Vast audience at the Albert Hall, and | the audience in turn seemed to give him the consciousness of his spell over it. The climex came with the | ‘Volga Boat Song.” | M. Challapin was heard “with! | breathless attention” by an audience! | | | London Morning Post. 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