Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, January 14, 1923, Page 7

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MANY BASEBALL STARS PASS ON Po: licater and Many Others Died During Sea- son. final passing for more men promin- ently connected with professional baseball than has any similar period in the history. of the national pas- time, Many stars of the diamond, beth active and retired, have died during the alst twelve months. Wider still has been the swath cut by the Grim Reaper in the ranks of league offictals, Vlu owners and managers. Morgan G. Bulkeley, one of the or- ganizers and first president of the Na- tional league, and who later rose to be governor of Connecticut, and a member of the United States senate, Nov. 6. The American league lost two of its magnates during the year. Benjamin Shilbe, the veteran president of the hiladelphia club, died on Jan. 14. In June the Cleveland club lost James C. Dunn, its chief owner and executive head. Other officials, plus owners and managers who passed during the year were: Mike Finn, owner of the Oma. ha Western league club; J. J. Me- Caffery, president of the Toronto club of the International league: Charles Frank, manager of the At- janta club and one of the founders ot the Southern Baseball association; William Armour, who, had managed | the Detroit and Kansas City clubs| and who was credited with having been the discoverer of Ty Cobb: John Conahan, veteran business menager of the Chicago Americans: William C. Black, vice president of the Peoria club; John P. Cortnor, and old-time player and a part owner of the Lo: well club in the Eastern league: David Pierson, who managed the first protessipnal baseball club in Newark, Be Adrian C. (Pop) Anson, for more than haf a century one of the notable figures of baseball and during nearly half that period the leader of the far- famed Chicago White Stockings, dled in Chicago on April 14, two days be- fore his seventieth birthday. Garland (Jake) Stahl, a noted play- er in his early days and later man- ager of the Washington and Boston| clubs of the American league, died at Los Angeles on Sept. 19. SUNDAY, JANUARY 14, 1923. IN LAST YEAR Anson, Jake Stahl, Dil- The past year has witnessed the |. sed away at his home in Hartford, | How to Start the Evening Wrong ~— WELL Ive Bouent: “Tae New CaR- won't: THe Boys Be Jeacous WHEN 1 Tecc’emM it've, BouGut ‘a HENRY t JUST BouGnt a ties peners Too BaD- Teo BAD! -You SHOULD HAVE HAD Someone ADVISE You BEFORE BUYING A CAR-- § THOUGHT You KNEW ABOUT THE...) at OF. CARS You eet ¥ HAUL OUT OF A HUNDRED MAKES AND Pick! ouT A ERIRIEW Ne RwUne ear SS TOON OLS Casper Sunday Morning Cribune By Briggs 1 HEAR You've BOUGHT ‘ BRS wm = fares clinion Hf DIDN'T You Kniow ABoU' The TerRi@.e THINGS THAT. ARG BEING SAID “ABOUT tT ? OH. You PooR Sucker! THe worst CAR ON Toe AND So-THa DAY IS COMPLE TELY- AND UTTeRLY RUINED! HAVE T Go se You'Re sore ‘Vw GoIné To MURDER THE .GUY That TOLD ME J Bua ls ae are Zs. VA CASPER HIGH SCHOOL DEFEATS | JUNRISE QUITET BY 14 10 11 Local Basketball Team Trims Well Coached, Rangy Squad in One of Lightest Scoring Games Seen Here in Several Years; Miss Many Chances. In one of the lightest scoring games seen here in several years, the Casper high school basketball team last night won the second game of the 1923 season by defeating the Sunrise quintet by a score of 14 to 11. ,The game was fast and clean Sam Thompson, 2 member of the! old Detroit team and one of the best known batters of earlier days, passed away at his home in Detroit on Noy. | a mafor league player, died at Mar- un's Ferry, O., on Oct...31.. Padden had played second base for the Pitts- burgh Pirates and was field captain for the St. Louis Browns, Other wejl known players who made their final exit during the year included: — William (‘Pickles’) Dil- hoefer, catcher of the St. Louis Na- tional Jeague team; Austin McHenry, Si Ited,"" she said. outfielder of the St. Louis National] aggrega t present. With a few hated him. The scene in her studio} ®U! r league. team; Joo Barry, catcher of|more oepreee hey Tay Sexslop, mere Player began to take on the distorted outlines ‘4 hele usiwy ane face lost its the Baltimore team of the Interna-|strength but at present they are not| Whitfield, rf. of a nightmare, merging into some.|Sighty barricaded look. This was a tional league; William Daly, for many years a pitcher with the Boston Na. onals; Daniel J. Hoffman, who had Played with NNew York, St. Louis Band Boston clubs; Peter Child, who had played with the St. Louis, Phila- delphia and Chicago —_ National: Joseph J. Gerhardt. second baseman of the New York Giants from 1885 to 1887; Edward Lynch, who pitched for the Cincinnat! Reds & number of years ago; Dr. H. F. Baley, who in the early days had pitched for the| New York and other National league clubs; George Cuppy, well known a decade ago as a pitcher with the Cleveland Nationals, St. Louis Na- tionals and Boston Americans; Gar- nett W, (“Midge”) Craven, a one time major league player and later man- ager of Central and Canadian league clubs; Tom McCarthy, former major league star and later scout for the Boston Red Sox; Jack Pickett. who| Played with Philadelphia, Brooklyn and other teams of the old National league; Joseph (Pat) Kilhullen, once be catcher with the Philadelphia Ath- etics. oo . LOUIS CLUBS The respective managements of tho St. Louls American and National easue clubs announced the declara- ton of dividends, the first to be de clared since reorganization of the clubs, The Cardinals, which were ro- organized in 1917, declared a 10 per mt cash dividend, and the Browns, which reorganized ‘n 1915, also de- iclared a cash dividend. the amount of which was not made publi —————___ GOLDEN GATE STADIUM TO HAVE COMPLETE FIELD) plans for the new stadium at Golden Gate park, San Francisco, provide for a football field, soccer, field, twelve tenn’s courts, a running| track, handball courts, basketball courts and clubhou ——-——_—_. BILL GILBERT, EX-GIANT, TO MANAGE DENVER CLUB Bill Gilbert, one time secon’ bare- man of the Giants, has been engaged f& manager of the Denver club of tho Western league, The Denver officials wired to McGraw for a manager and Mac recommended Gilbert, who was a free agent. Denver accepted Bill tm- mediately and toi him to plek a training camp somewhere in the south and get after a few new play: ere. Gilbert finished second with the Waterbury club in the Bastern leagus last season. eae Wanted—200 neonie to eat chicken dinner at the Methodist church, on Thursday evening, 5:30 to 6:30; price Seomnd 26a Leddite “Dick Padden, famous in his time as * about all that can be said for the teams in the state. Their floorwork 41 jutting in a half dozen points by missing easy scrimmage will develop an ordinary the foul line. night’s game except for a few min- when Sunrise popped in two baskets bout the center of th: DECLARE ringer from al THEIR FIRST DIVIDENDS, "%°r by Lester put Casper on its feet enka jand the visitors never took the lead again. |Iatter two men getting two fleld goals each. Chapman was injured near the lout. His injury was not serious. Sun- |rise played clean, sportsman-like bas- local floor. two free throws, scored 10 of Caspers 14 points. second half put the necessary into the local quintet when they were just contributed two nice goals from short and kept the large crowd of spectators on their feet most of the time. Sunrise brought a well coached,! shots. Davis, Groves and McGrath rangy squad that considerably out-/held up the general team play and Weighed the iocal aggregation. The) -» team should be a smooth working stors were fully the equal of Cas- combination in another month. per in passing and flocrwork but were! Casper—i4. away off form in shooting. The Red! Player and Black men have eyidently been, Lester, rf. —---.__. playing on a floor with a low ceiling! Davis, If. as their shots wero driven straight in| Overbaugh, c. and seldom found the mark. Thetr Groves, rg. great weakness was in shooting and! McGrath, Ig. taking too many chances on shots! Post, If. from around the middle of the floor. Ie. Casper's team is fair and that Is in shape to go against the strongest . | Finnerty, c. he best asset tho Natrona county|Bacheri, rg. playera showed last night. The pass-! Nestolin, Ix. ing was only mediocre. That looping Tucker, pass that Casper uncorked occasion- ally to get the ball over an oppo-| Totals vitae ete Referee—Jack Hellman. nent’s head or to throw ahead of a forward going in on a shot {is a dan- —_———_ gerous pass and has been practically M ] K 0 R SPORTS eliminated in the last few years by both the college and professional) chances. Natural shots are born and) MINNEAPOLIS, Minn., Jan. 13— not made but an hour's shooting prac-| Michigan vanquished Minnesota 32 league players. There is always the possibility of a man on the other team tice a day in addition to the regular'to 11 in the first conference game for the Gophers here tonight. on the pass before it reaches its destination. If that hap- pens possession of the ball is lost. ‘The local players are also weak on shcoting and last night threw away player Into an accurate shot inside PHILADELPHIA, Pa., Jan, 18.— Pennsylvania's basketball team de- feated Navy here tonight 25 to 24. Casper had the upper hand in last utes in the middle of the second half PRINCETON, N. J., Jan. 13. In a hard-fought game Princeton’ basketball team defeated Dartmouth 25 to 24. in quick , succession, A _ Dbenutiful 5 ANN ARBOR, Mich., Jan 13. — Whitfleld, Chapman and Bacher!) The University of Michigan's hockey howed up well for the visitors, the) team made it two straight from Wis- consin, winning on the local court tonight 1 to 0. end of the game and had to be taken COLUMBUS, Ohio, Jan. 13.—North- ‘Western defeated the Ohio State unt- versity basketball quintet 26 to 24 at the Calissum here tonight. ketball and the team ts a credit to the town. That is the kind of a game that brings popularity on an out-of- town court and the Platte county CHAMPAIGNE, Tll., Jan. 13.—mi- boys will always be welcome on the nois fast basketball team swent In- diana off its feet here tonight, win- Lester, ning handily 81 to 22. with four field goals anf His two long shots in the pep Wisconsin Downs Chicago By 24-11 MADISON, Wis., Jan. 18. — By a score of 24 to 11, Wisconsin downed Chioago's basketball machine here to- night, Only twice dié Chicago main a! basket. The excelient teamwork of | the Wisconsin quintet kept the ball almost entirely in the home terri- tory. beginning to sag. Overbaugh BASKETBALL RESULTS Saturday night's basketball re- sults Wisconsin 24, Chicago 11, > U. P. MAN WINNER OF 70-YARD INDOOR RACE . Jac v.} Michigan 82, Minnesota 11. ine, cece Methe want : 6, Ohio 24. i anor ta Ka raha Hectonerers 88: York staff of the United Press, won the metropolitan 70-yard indoor | sprint championship tonight, defent- nnsylvanin nt Prinneaaee 3 ing Edde Farrell, among othe: Scholz, a former member of the ted Press team at the Olympic mes) at Antwerp, will now co out after the} |50, 60 and 100-yard metropolitan ! | championships. 8 , Dartmouth 24, MecAlester 28, Gustayus Adol- phus 24. Olaf 24, St. Johns 11. eye fell on a crayon sketch of the well ‘tell y ante he's never held himself above ex- ‘Are All Men Alike’ By Arthur Stringer Author of “The Prairle Wife” "The House of Intrigue,” Ete. INSTALLMENT NO. TWo. | \WHO’S WHO IN THE CAST Theodora Lyd'a Lorillard Hayden, 2 ‘oor little rich girl, seeks freedom nd a means of “expressing herself" y renting a studio in Greenwich Vil- age. Taking her Art with a big A, she allows Raoul Uhlan, a well known portrait sainter, to come three times a week to ‘ve her instruction. At the third ‘isit Uhlan casts aside: all restrair* and seizes and kisses her in spite of ner protests and struggles, Leaving her triumphantly he swears he will return “tomorrow at three,’ Major Chandler Kane, Theodora’s cle, who admires and sympathizes th his niece. He tells her life is Uke a waffletron, making. every one nto the same pattern. Just where and how I might touch with him.” eR “I guess maybe you'll find him at the Aldine Athletic Club about this time." And with that the conference ended. It was three hours before Gunboat! had finished with his boxing-class at the club, and had apparelled himself im attire befitting a call on a rib, (as he expressed it', who could bed her Ponies down in bank-notes. When he appeared before Teddie, accordingly, he did so in oxblood shoes and light tan gloves and a close-fitting “college” suit that translated him into anything but a knight of brawn. “WFR Dora began Teddie, with a quietness which was merely 2 mask to her inner exélte-| iment. “I'm in a very great diffieulty and I've been wondering {f you'd be Willing to help me out of it.” “What's the trouble, lady?” asked Gunboat. Teddie was direct. “I've just been insulted in this studio by @ brute who calls himself a man, intolerably and atrociously in- Sunboat Dorgan Wins = Battle and Claims the Fruits of Victory. THEODORA, confronted by the first entirely pless night of her reer, hugged her wounded pride to 1er breast and went pioneering. The more she thought of Raoul ‘hian and his affront the more she thing as disquieting as remembered dreams of being denuded. It wasn't until daylight came that any possible plan of procedure pre- sented itself, Then, as she paced her studio in the light of morning, her matter which brought him back to earth. “And this man threatens to come here today and repeat that insult,” ‘Teddie went on. “And, to apeak quite plainly, I want some one to protect saa Gunboat's face brightened. Ii9 moistened a hard young lip with the point of his tongue as he stood gazing Into clouded eyes for which lances would surely have been shattered at Ashley. “Who's the guy been gettin’ fresh?" he demanded, “It's a beast called Raoul Uhlan,” she announced. “That puddin't’ cried Gunbeat, with a touch of ecstasy. “Why, that guy) tried to pull that soft stuff with Ruby last winter, but nothin’ put me wiso| until {t was six monhs too late. Say,| lady, what d’ yuh want me to do to that caxe eater? Blot ‘im out?” — | There was a hard light in the pagan | y of the girl in black. she announced ,without hest-| muscled right arm of one Gunboat Dorgan. She stopped short, arrested by a thought as pew as though it had bloomed out of the table beside her. Her only hope, she suddenly felt, lay in Gunboat Dorgan. Her only chance of balancing life's ledger of violence rested with that Bast Side youth with the foreshortened nose and the caull- flower ear. Es 4S Theodora had met Dorgan some time before this inchtent and before her Uncle Chandler sad been down to visit her. Uncle Chandler had in- spected the crayon sketch, a right arm and shoulder wh'ch: at least de manded some qualified respect. But his grizzled old eyebrows were closer together as he looked up at Teddie in. “Did you say you drew from models?” he casually inquired. “Of coursé,” she acknowledged. “You don't mean to say you have men come up here and—and expose thelr muscles for this sort of thing?” demanded Uncle Chandles. ‘Teddie laughed. “Oh, no that wasn’t a professional model. That's the arm of Gunbcat Dorgan, the lightweight prize-fighter. I sketched that the other afternoon when he was up here with Ruby Reamer, one of my regular models. He's Ruby's steady, as she calls it. “And Gunnie—that’s what Ruby calls him—isn't a bit ke what I thought « prize-fighter would be. He's rather a bright-minded boy, ida Uttle shy, and if he wins the bout from Slim Britton, the English boxer, he'a going to marry Ruby.” T was Gunboat Dorgan who could do for her what the situation de- “Then he'll get his other, just as promptly. “I want you to give him lesson that he'll never, never forget,” she ex- plained, a lttle paler than usual. “I want you to show him {t isn't safe to insult defenseless girls. “Oh, I'll show ‘1 announced Gunboat. He'll know something m I get through wit’ him.” demanded Teddle in businesslike tone of] which she was capable, “will you ex- peet me to pay you for this’ “Pay me?" repeated Gunboat. not dotn’ this for pay.” “Then what are you doing it for?” asked Teddie. “I'm doin’ it for yuh!” asserted Gun- boat, leaning fraternally over the! table-end. “I've that little roadster of my own,” she feebly suggested, feeling the need cf some effort to depérsonal- “rm manded. ze the issue. “It wouldn't be pay. of| Her only way of getting in touch|course. Rut when you and Ruby} with him, she remembered, was|settle down in your flat it would be through Ruby Reamer. nice for running out into the country “Ruby/" she said over the telephone. in hot weather. You'd take that,! about the situation as a whole. But she made her decision, and she intend @d to stick to it. She watched Gunboat step to the door, with his hat in his hand, come to a stop, and then step back to the table-end. “Bay,” he said with a‘slightly self- conscious and not altogether heroic look on his face, “don't say anything to—to Miss Reamer about this, lady. {f yuh don’t mind. It’s not that I've got anything to hide. But yuh know what women are!” “(\OME in,” said Teddie, shakily. The knocker on her door had sounded ominously through the quiet- ness, and courage seemed to vanish before a breathless sense of impend ing culmination. She knew, as she saw Raoul Uhlan step quietly into the studio and close the door behind him, that the die was cast, and it was al- ready too late to evade the intimidat- ing final issu Yet her visitor, as he crossed smil- ingly to the table where she sat, car: ried less of the air of a cave-man than she had expected. There was a carnation in his button- hole and an air of relief touched with Meekness on a face plainly more pallid than usual. “Don't be afraid of me," he mur- mured. “I'm not,” bravely. And inapposite as it may have been, he impressed her as being pathetic, as Pathetic as a ponderous and full- blooded ruminant of the herd already marked for slaughter by the butcher's appraising eye. “But you're pale,” sald Uhlan with all the vox tremolo staps pulled out. HE shook his appropriating hand from her shoulder and fell back a few steps, eying him intently.. For she was swept by a belated impulse to warn him off from the dead-fall int Which he was so stupidly blundering “There's just one thing I want to say to you, that I must say to you,” she told him still in the grip of that forlorn impulse to escape from it all while escape was yet possible. But he advanced confidently, by step, and she retr “What's the use of wa rather asserted Teddle, quite tep ng words?” suit that gave him the begulling air of a etripling. “And what do you want?" demand ed Uhlan, with one appropriative arm grasping the girl. “I want yuh,” announced Gunboat Dorgan, shedding his coat with one and only one movement of the arms. The big portrait-painter slowly re- leased his hold. His face hardened. Then he looked sharply at Teddie. Then he looked ever more sharply at the audacious youth who significantly kicked a chair away from the center of the room. “What does all this mean?” he de- manded, drawing himself up, for Gun- boat Dorgan was already advancing toward him. “It means I'm going to pound this zooin’-bug out 0’ your, fat carcase, cried the lightweight bbxer, with ex ultation fn his kindling eyes. to show this diminutive intruder that trifled with. cd seemed to intervene. Raoul was suddenly subjected to many experi- ences which were hard to account for. the principal one being a misty won- der as to why an opponent so in- significant to the eye could devastating in his fore-shortened arm strokes. Not that the big-framed artist didn’t resist, and resist to the last of his strength. But the thing became loath- some to the girl who no longer stood aside in a qold and impersonal fury. wabhied against the table, ant ‘Teddie, realizing that she had trifled with darker and deeper currents than sho had dreamed, feit a good deal like ® murderess, and could stand !t no more. She was faint and aick and un. certain in the knee-Joints take him he softly inqutrea, “I'm going to pound this Zooin' “But they won't be wasted,” cried h 1 rl. erything that keeps me from re- membering will be wasted!” } “Remembering what?" | “That you waited in for me! Every-| thing but that will be wasted,” he re-| minded her. “At first I was afraid,| terribly afraid, that you wouldn't be here when I came. But you knew that I was coming, and you stayed! And that's all I want to know." | “Do you know why I stayed?” she demanded, whiter than ever, stunned by the colosal egotism that could as- sume so much. “Yes—for this,” was his reply as he took possession of the two barricading| arms in their loose-aleeved blouse. She tried to gasp out a desperate “Wait!” but he smothered the cry on her lips. It was not a scream that she gave voice to, when she could catch her breath, but more a moan of hate tangled up with horror. | And it was at that precise moment that Gunbcat Dorgan stepped into the EDDIE'S persecutor, with one quick ginace over his shoulder, saw the intruder. He saw the younger man in the natty sophomor CAN BE CU in the |most’ matter-of-fact tone of which she was capable, “can you tell me where I can find your friend, Mr. surely?” Gunboat essayed a hand-movement of repudiation which he'd seen quite Dorgan?” often in the movies. He was warmly There was a ponderable space oT) conacious, in fact, of an appeasine silence. touch of the theatrical in this knight “And what do you want with me friend Mr. Dergan?” asked Ruby. “It's for something I can't very well uu,” Teddie said, “something that I'll be able to explain to you later on.” And again @ silence that was ob viously meditative intervened. “Of course I've never tried to butt in on Gunnie's personal affairs,” an- nounced a nomewhat dignified Miss Reamer. "But when Gunnie makes a errantry that had bobbed so unex- Pectedly up at the end of a hum-drum mornin “Noth-thing doln’!” he sald with de- cision. “I get enough out of it when I slam that stiff. Yoh say he's goin’ to crash in here at three o'clock. Well, I'll breeze tn at three-two, rail- roa time, And I'll learn him to think twice before he fi that sooln’-bug around a girl who's been born and, bred a lady!" Plainin’ {t to me.” And even Téddie, az shé atood up “Then suppose we leave the ex-|and shook hands with her new-found plaining to him,” Teéddie suggested. | champion, was troubied by a vague “Bo I'll be obliged if you can tell me t persistent touch of theatricality Free Proof To You your name and address so I can send you a freo trial 1 treatment—that’s all— AILT wantis treatment. i$ you just to try thi « Asso: treatm: v8, Fort Wayne I first made this If you have ment tias cured Send mi tosend you ‘early every one in Fort W: jon, t, -Fi hi according wo their owns offer public. ezema, Itoh. the worst cases fover saw: your nam: id address on the REE. The wonders secomplished eassnenenesenonesoceoosteeetee® «OUT AND MAIL TODAY treseoosoosoneosnoonnonennentons No. 1558 West Main St., Fort Wayne, Ind. J. O. HUTZELL, Druggls Please send without cost or obligation te | wame. = ee | Post Office, lookinghands av ECZEMA ig Businens for 20 years, jana State Hoard of Pharmacy and fivo years 0 ements, been cured by this treatment “Oh, take him away, away!" she pleaded, with her hands Bug out of your fat carcass.” held over her face horror of it all, And the triumphant Gunboat Dor- gan took him away, an inert hulk anything but good to look upon, a disheveled somnambulist with a right eye that was already beginning to close. wees the prize back into the studio he already seemed to have himself well in hand. He was flushed and a little warm, but outwardly unruffled. He put on t coat and came and stood over Teddi where she sat limp and white, staring down at the overturned oasel. And he in turn stood staring down at her, with his head a little to one side. “Yuh're a thoroughbred,” he averred with unqualified admiration. “Yuh're a thoroughbred, and I’m for yuh, lady, to the last jabt"* Whereupon Teddte, who felt trag!- cally alone in the world, began to ery. “Gee, don't do that,” implored her protector, genuinely disturbed, But Teddie, oblivious of his pres- ence, sat there and wept without sound or movement. “Why, your gink’s canned f'r yuh, tr good, he explained as he made a roughl. gentle effort to draw her om her wet fac to shut out the fighter stepped J.C, MUTZELL R. PL Dauceist I served four years as a member ‘as President of the Retail Druggists’ ‘8 mo and knaws about my succesafu Nel Mon, Women and Children outaide of ever mind how bad-my treat- 28 to, reve my a iim. ‘and get the tFial treatment l want in your own ease will be proof. © your Free Proof Treatment. State__ Street and No And Teddie, overcome by what she knew to be so tmminent, tried to call| out “Stop!” tried to say “No, no; it’s a man of his dimensions wasn't to be} But something altogether unexpect- be so} For Uhlan’s nose bled prodigiousty | and left tell-tale maculations on the studlo-floor. Finally the dazed big PAGE SEVEN. “Oh, please go away,” said thé Wweak-votced girl, with a revulsion of feeling which left utter solitude the jonly thing to be desired. | But Gunboat Dorgan had experi- enced his own revulsions of feeling. |And he was flushed now with somo- |thing more than victory. “Say, Ruby's all right," he conf- dentially acknowledged. “But this sure puts her in the discard. And What's more, I'm glad things broke {the way they did. I'm mighty glad It was me you got to put this thing straight. And—" “I want to be alone,” moaned Ted- die through her tear-wet fingers. “Of course yuh do,” acknowledged | her new-found knight. “And yuh will be, But if I'm goin’ to hit those | Long Island resorts in a If'l roadster | when the hot weather comes, I'd like | to think it's goin’ to be wit’ yuh!’ || And before she quite realized what he meant Gunboat Dorgan had caught | her up and kissed her on the tear- stained cheek. (ar Y" understand don’t yuh!" he said, But she was too late. | laughing a llttle triumphantly at the OR the second tle in one 489.) stricken light which came into ber Raoul Uhlan was guilty of lovee. Krave error in judgment. He decided| She stood up, dizzy, gathering her [breath to say what she had to say. But he pushed her back gently into her chair. with a smile that was both @ little shy and a little proprietary. Then he slipped out of the room with his Nght and panther-like step, leav- ing her with the bed-rock of existence no longer merely undulating, but fallen utterly awa: (Copyright, 1922, by the Bell Syndl- cate, Inc.) Bluo Blood, thin skin, the majesty of law and the green god monster, | make tomorrow's installment a thrill- Ing one. | BURNED OUT . | “KNOCKOUT” BROWN. Valentine “Knockout” Brown, Gotham's pugilistic dynamo of a number of years back, burned hime self out of a chance to become champion by fighting too often. He was a great southpaw boxer until Joe Rivers knocked him out. TO DARKEN HAIR APPLY AGE TEA Look Young! Bring Back Its Natural Color, Gloss and Attractiveness Common garden sage brewed into a j heavy tea with sulphur added, will turn gray, streaked and faded hair beautifully dark and luxuriant. Juet | a few applications will prove a revela- | tion if your hair {s fading, streaked or gray.. Mixing the Sage Tea and Sul- phur recipe at home, though, is | troublesome. An easier way ts to get | @ bottle of Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur | Compound at any drug store all ready |for use. This is the old-time recipe improved by the addition of other in- gredients. While wispy, gray, faded hair is not sinful, we all desire to retain our youthful appearance and attractive- ness. By darkening your hair with Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur Compound, no one can tell, because it does it so naturalty, so evenly. You just dampen ® sponge or soft brush with it and draw this through your hair, taking one small strand at a time; by morn- ing all gray hairs have disappeared, and, after another application or two, your hair becomes beautifully dark, | slossy, soft and luxurlant.—Adv, School will prepare you for the po- sition ahead of you at a higher salary. We teach you how to earn more money by special training in: Business Letter Writing, Bookkeeping, Accounting, Shorthand, Typewriting, Arithmetic Salesmanship Casper Business College, Inc. Phone 1825 the

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