Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, October 7, 1925, Page 5

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WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1925 OUT OUR WAY | IU TT NOTH NAME OF THIS GRATE STATE, © DEMANO CHAPTER 41 “Goodnight I enjoyed the Che Casper Daily Cribune ~ SAM! DOES TH PRoscuTi TORNEY RELIZE HES TALKIN! HISSELF AN’ US OUTA A THIS 15 TH’ OAN CRIMINUL TAT TAIS DESPRIT | WE GOT. AN IF WE SexrONce --By Williams N GOOD GosHi NES! ATS A ORAL LONG TIME BETWeEns SoBe? oe ns wee vend | Musieal Circles Find | Thrill in Prodigies {ss Revealed at Gotham board, gn him the boar rpe ation in Today's velopments marked | other chapter in tk es of tar | | gles ich have faced the sh board for months. an i evening.” ‘ presenting the Gulf “Is Mr. Ardle a friend from West-| °venins- CRIMINGNAL SHuD | HIM FER UFE,WHOS GONNA | ARRESTS, ! ane - ) sae rentoren ting the aed unsuccessfully to give an Indifferent} he would run after her, . pee re rgtec polite Bical and desis’ fa beca tone to the query. wavering, his mind afire, his arms LIFE IMPRISONMINT NS co KIN KEEP \S LONG ANUFF, Uterary circles were stirred today in the Euphrates and ond of No. He is a Chicagoan...” aching to enfold her. God! how FER LIFE- FER IN 2 HIOH 2 SENTINCE. / expectation and admiration over many terms that ‘There was an awk silence, | beautiful she was, withthe pale TH’ GOOD OF ALL— two prodigies, one from Kansas City abulary of sea-g¢ which she broke wi hall we | Moonlight shining down on her ivory RS) and the other from Brooklyn, dance this one?” skin's stening hair! Then, Their talents have been récogniz- s be ited to foot was set upon the porch, Tommy arose automaticall 8 relaxed in resignation. little worried smile, One didn" : ave to be subtle to discern that , Amoura Amoura Ainsley had been deerty| She went wearily to bed, and affected by this chance meeting with | dreamed of dancing on the edge of Var Andina’ » Vat In the eandy factory until she he didn’t enjoy the dance. She| fell: in and’ was rescued Samuel however, feel a sense of relief | Bloom. i when they gyrated by Vey's table} Although her hours made 4t un- and she saw that he and-his com-} , Amoura still allowed Mrs gone. She tried to Stone to get her up every morning member at comp looked. | for t with the others wondered if it was a brother or] It s . and afforded her j time i z walk 1 he s ested jin the languishing half park hour or More of reading alongside ne for a working-girl nd at a quarter to one|the lagoon with the cheering sun ‘ommy’s car paused in front of M ascending in her face. On the Sat ne’s rooming house. urday morning after her evening Intil after the chauffeur opened | with Tornmy—and Vey Ardle—she the door, and both of them got out) got up unwillingly, and was in an and walked to the gate, where Am-/ugly mood when she sat down at oura paused to dismiss him, there} the breakfast table with indif. was silence. Then: ferent “good mc “ae “May I come for you Sun¢ ing? We could golf, and 1 motor in the afternoon?” “'m sorry, mr but I yura A an engagement,” d . throbbing 1 didn’t care if she eve him again,| “Where'd you ge look ag if you had a wicked st night,” Paula e ned da stnile despite Paula persist and was thinking j hat between gulps of He appeared reluctant to go. His| question annoyed her, and hand moved carefully over one of| Amoura answered curtly: “Oh just hers, that rested on the fen | out for dinner and dancing.” Paul “Amoura, more tha nfcast her eyes down with a what I sald that nig and the other girls looked sli S TRwiLlaas > fo-7 (© 1808 BY MEA sEmCK imc,” When there was nc continued: “Is there “T don’t know,” she She-turned and started while M ne paused | way to the kitchen fo! her boarder. All} rstoad the temper. ach othe gesture of Impatience. Nel- ther Roberta Lynch nor Allene May nor Laura Mack liked this girl they | they discussed the She had knew as Amy Ainsworth, never invited themi to her room, or been more than formally cordial and worse, she apparently had made an intimate of Paula, who was to them an abomination. But their aversion to Amoura did not cause them to be any the less interested in her goings and comings. They knew about the visits of Philip Wein- rich and her father; of the fine clothes In her room; of her new po- sition as model; of the number of let- ters she received and where they were from. Furthermore they had Mrs. Stone's word for it that there was “something mysterious about her": and this whetted their appe- tite for any little detail that any of them happened to pick up. She would have been amazed at the space she occupied in their mental note- books, J This morning, as they hurried to the elevated station in company, scene at the breakfast table. “OH, just out for DINNAH and DAWNCING,” Roberta Lynch gig- gled, contorting her face, and put- ting Allene and Laura in glee, “Oh!” When she had recovered from her giggles, and had looked around to see that Paula was not at her heels, she babbled: ‘You KNOW she must have been stepping SOME, from the way sho got all flushed when Paula asked her where she went. Well, Mrs. Stone says she thinks her fath- “That's the Best Dime’s Worth I ever Tasted. No wonder everybody is ‘raving’ about it.” SWEET CANDY COMPANY Salt Lake, Utah er is an actor, and you know how these stage people ARE.” Allene nodded, but Laura did not express herself. At this moment Amoura was lying across her bed with with her clothes on, indulging {n another hour of sleep, She arrived in the dressing room of LaHoublerre's just as Ma- dame’s lieutenant was preparing to call the roll. As she reduced her apparel to a step-in and slipped on the robe she wore between appear ances in the exhibition salon, her neighbor at the next dressing table paused, a lip-stick in the alr, and turned to her familiarly: fo this Carton with the Cowboy OW conscious we are of our skin! Even one little pimple or blackhead will so embarrass us that we want to hide right away. And eczema, boils, blotches and rashes! Why, these awful thinge simply destroy all our ambition! But what confidence we have in ourselves if our skin is clear and unblemished—free from any erup- tions or breaking out! A clear 8 is one of the greatest possessions jn the world—and it is so easy to pave ft. All that is necessary is to keep our systems full of rich, red, pure blood. 8, 8. 8, helps Nature build this blood, And the impuri- ‘les that iso these so-called skin (isorders are driven right out of fhe system, If you want the kind of skin that ates men and compels the ad- tion of other women, just re- yonber that you can't have it if four blood is impoverished. But, pist build red-blood-cells in your plcod with 8. 8. 8. and your dream bla soft, rosy, velvet skin, clear of Hemishes, will be re- tized. Then notice he difference in the ray you feel. 8. 8. 8. has proven or generations that ; helps Nature build he rich, red blood that makes beau- iful skin and healthy bodies. Let 3. 8. S. prove it for you. Get 8. S. 8. from any drug store. nd get the larger bottle, It's more omical. “Who's your boy friend, the one} long as Madison | Amo smiled. “Oh ———.” | She shrugged enigmatically. ‘Has he a friend?” i ‘ou may have HIM if you like.” What's the matter? Is he a dead one?” ‘Oh, no, quite lively, Proposed the first “IT know the of the gre ajority.”” She completed a careful application of the cosmetic, and began filing her nails. After minutes of silence, broken only by the rasping of the file, she asked: “What's his phone number?” with such a suddenness as tq cause} Amoura to laugh. “Oh, I don't, know.” i “Don’t know his telephone num: ber? Well!” i Another model had heard the last of this conversation, and she now got up and pranced to the first girl's side, singing, “If you wanta get rid of aman, just lend him to Ann. They march like wooden soldiers for Ann,” she called to Amoura. “Don't they Annie Baby?” “Yeah, and they all got about as much brains as a wooden soldier. But their heart—Oh, a washtub wouldn’t hold it, Just overflowing with good will for the ‘poor wolking | soil.” All of the others in the room heard the blatant voice and laughed. An anonymous voice cried out from the other end of the room, “’Too-bad you | always get the ones that can’t read | and write, else you could frame up a breach of promise sult. Ten times a bridesmaid and never a bride. Six times engaged and never suit for | heart balm yet. Poor Annie!’ The others took up the refrain, “POOR | ANNIE!" ed in the one case by a contract to sing horseshoe of the Metropolitan Opera | house, and the other by tlon of a second book of v Miss Marion Talley of City, 18-year-old daughter of a rail- road telegrap who has been studying three years since she first impressed the authorities of the Metropolitan, "is ready for a de that the musical critic of the among the mature poets of Ar Metropolitan Giulio Gatti-Casazza, ger. time late in t she was three years old. Crane, “The poems. u she has written lines wh reckoned as very fine poetr of it teetering the edge of g and that she shows tho v Amoura found herself amused by this coarse and raucous humor, and| she began the monotonous parades | of the exhibition salon in an exu-| berant mood. The morning passed | unnoticed, and it was one o'clock, | the Saturday closing hour, before | she realized that she would be free Ardle, coming for her at 5 would find a darkened es-| tablishment. What a good foke!| But even as she smiled, her heart rebelled. In her mind was the thought that she would not return to walt for him, but in her heart }she knew she would. The fires of } love were flaming in her being, | (To be continued) next chapter: Mastered ———_—— FIVE BREAK | CANADA JAIL | WINNIPEG, In the | elated Press}—Five men |two held on charges of |sawed through the t of their cells, assaulting a turnkgy and es ecaped from the provincial jail here yesterday, The fugitives { ton, internatlo trial for the m 70 years old, hammer blows his home here in 1922, Stanton was ar- | rested at Castle prison farm in In diana early this summer. Jude J As a turnkey was making his rounds early today, the men rushec from their s and overpowered him, Then bound and gagged him, securing the keys with which they opened the front entrance of the| fail, and then an automobile. | REQUSITIONPFERS. DEED BY COERNOR yo., Oct. 7.—(By Associated Press).—Governor Nellie Tayloe Ross today declined to honor the requisition of Governor Morley of Colorado, for R. W. Fay, charged ed automo- Wyoming. sor held that CHEYENNE bile from Col The Wyoming inasmuch as the mortgaged car had | been returned to Colorado there was ground for the y to the Colorado au- not sufficient render of ¥. thorities. Fay was arrested at Cas- per. ———___— Milady says, “Use Annice Beantl fier.” Get it Midwest Pharmacy before the famous Dinmond publica, Kansas une says will startle New Yor) era lovers. “Lava Lane,” the second book of verse by year-old Nathalia Crane,| _ wasHtni stirs the Hterary critic of the Brook-| jiateq Press) —I lyn Eagle to place her The signing of Miss Talley by the was announced by general mana- first She will appear for the winter been singing ud ¥ Miss Talley since When ten years old, Little Miss then a pupil in t chool, published a volume © Janitor’s Boy" and other Reviewing her second vol me, the Brooklyn I says that ch must be it some tness, Jor TRUE OHAREUP fo. 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