Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 73, 27 March 1922 — Page 5

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND., MONDAY, MARCH 21, 1922.

PAGE FIVE

TUsDiio on gave

INEZ KLUMPH C2r

Illunnalcl fcu MARbUlRlTK MEALS

WHO'S WHO AMI WHAT'S i IHHPKKI). 1 RICHARD BKABAXT, a successful .voutiR lawyer, has given a year's leave to his wifi, S.U,L.Y, hoping that she will learn som-thlnK of life during that time. She begins by meeting KEITH GIL.BE11T, always labelled "Dangerous," 'anil through him associating with New York's greatest crowd of celebrities of the artistic world, among them Lee Craig, a pretty artist. Guv Selden, a playwright and Graham Browne, a financier. Gilbert makes no secret of his love for her, nor does I'ATKICIA IJOVASG, a modern flapper, make any secret of her fondness for him. Sally goes to a dance club with HAKBAUA LANE, who is an oldfashioned wife, and her husband and their guest.

NEAL CALHOUN. and there sees i Gilbert with Patricia. Calhoun intimates that Gilbert is not a man whom ; Sally should know. Sally learns that her husband, who has gone West, has j

taken nis pretty secretary wun hum, and is so piqued by the knowledge that she accepts Gilbert's invitation to a house-party at the Eyrie, his country place. The evening of her arrival she sees mysterious lights on the river and sees signals from the house.

sophisticated. And nobody knew how much money he made, because even he himself couldn't count it up. "A show has to make 15,000 a week

to keep going on Broadway ana you

CHAPTER XIX A TENSE MOMENT It was a charming little dinner party, to all appearances. Sally glanced about at the others at Keith Gilbert, next her, remarkably good looking; at Pats beside him, vivacious, attractive in her daring black frock; at Guy Selden, lean, nervous, wittier than usual; at Lee, who would pique anyone's interest, with her vivid red hair and her narrow eyes; at Graham Browne, on her own left, big, solid, obviously the financier of importance. But Sally was not happy. It was an effort for her to keep from thinking of what she had heard over the

telephone that afternoon. Why shouldn't Dick have a vacation too, she asked herself. Why shouldn't he take his secretary with him?

(I . ti (!i.a.!a-

liar, though some of them are a bit i eccentric perhaps like our friend Guy, here. . . "One of' the guests see3 things that pique his curiosity when he is dressing for dinner strange lights on the river below the house other lights that flash from the daTkness on the hills behind it " Unconsciously, Sally was tearing her gauzy scarf to shreads. So Browne had seen the lights too. And he wanted Keith to know that he had seen them. She turned to Keith. He was staring at the orchids in the center of the table, his mouth set grimly in a smile that was nothing more than a grimace. Once he glanced at Graham Browne, and the fury In that glance made Sally cower down in her chaiF But when he spoke his voice

was as nonchalant as usual.

"Why not bring your plot up to date, Browne?" he asked, carelessly. "Why not Jet the man be running

booze in from Canada, or from some little seaport to which it's brought from Bermuda?" "Good idea," commented Browne, eyeing Keith steadily. "Go on and develop the idea." But before Keith could speak a low whistle came to them from somewhere behind the house melodious, long drawn out, it somehow carried with it a warning of danger, even to the unsuspecting. Tomorrow Out of the Night.

law whistle came from without, carrying a warning of danger.

when nervous, J peare represented English literature.

American was represented by a giltedged set of Fenimore Cooper, and of

Hawthorne. The deadening monotony

"sets" was slightly relieved!

some volumes of poets, mostly

bound with, padded covers, the binder's : idea, apparently, being to make 'the book as much like a cushion as pos- ' sible. French literature being con

sidered Immoral, was not included at

era, -a trick sne had

answered : "What do you expect? All the men in our set are married ; If I looked at - .1 . ,4A ti--. n 1 H ctaFt I h O

most awful scandal about it. As for; of these

the women, I do all the things tney ao. by

Besides, we re not so narrow, iou mustn't think, because you've lived in the city, that we're so hopelessly backwoods here." Millie was warming herself into a state almost resembling enthusiasm.

ra. r

Lots of men did that. It was unlike him, of course yet it was unlike her, too, to be off

this sort of

Iocs Kill in ph

ud here in the hills with

crowd, and no chaperone. "Oh, wp don't need one," thought, disgustedly. "We're all

get at least five percent of the gross

receipts ye gods, why wasn t I a playwright!" lamented Lee Craig, a few minutes later, when Selden complained of hard times. "Or a bootlegger," Browne cut in. "They're the chaps who make the money, these days. By the way, Gilbert, you must have a marvellous private stock, judging by the stuff you're giving us here thi3 evening. Come by it honestly?" "Oh sure I've had it for years," answered Keith, but it seemed to Sally that he was ill at ease; she noticed that his hand that lay on the table beside her was tightly clenched, and that he ate almost nothing. He seemed curiously tense, for him the least sound made him straighten up in his chair, alert, listening. "Do use this scene as a setting in one of your plays, sometime. Guy,"

1 Lee Craig urged him. "The coloring

i is nice all this irridescent glass on J the table, and the coloring of our

U1U ! .

After Ten Years By MARION RUBINCAM

"We all do church work. There's a

Charity Bazaar twice a. year to raise ; money for the poor, and the Church: Social once a month to raise money for well, I- don't know what the Rever-; end Mills is raising it for now, but it's ' always some good purpose. And there's the club " j . "The Bridge club?" Patty asked, heri eyes showing her amusement as she;

remembered the system or tines anQi rewards where hours of work took the place of money. Thus reminded of the many hours she was indebted to the club, Millie took up her eweater and began knitting rapidly. The sweater, of course, was to go to the poor Millie knitted children's sweaters because they went faster, and being short of money the day she bought the yarn, she purchased a cheap grade containing cotton, never dreaming that she was in any way cheating the future little beneficient. "No, there's that, and the Thanatopsis Club. - I was made vice-president this year. I'd rather be that than president, it's as much an honor and

no work. Mrs. Werner Is president, but she likes running things." Millie rattled on quite forgetting Humphrey and her troubles, "We look after the poor in the town, and we have a civic improvement commitee at least, we're going to have one and we have papers read on Important subjects to keep ourselves up to date. We take up courses of read

ing and I'm not narrow minded. Look

all.

Pattv had read everything

when she was a child. She took some couraged

doors. Millie, viewing them with great satisfaction, said: "I think they look real neat. A lot of odd books sitting on open shelves seem so messy. Besides, they need constant dusting. Where are you going?" "To the Library," Patty answered. "Come along, the walk will be good for you." As Millie went to get her coat end hat, the young girl stood staring at the v . i ... I . i. 1 1 i t i.

j L'uutL laoe vitu ait its taivtu uan inui-he-Tp I mines. She looked completely tlis-

Then a whimsical smile

of the volumes down, running through

their clean, stiff pages. In most the pages were uncut, they had not been touched. She got up from the floor, locking the books again behind their glass

brightened her face.

When Millie came in she said: "You know, my dear, you're exactly like your library of books. You haven't permitted yourself a book or a feeling that isn't entirely standardized or ap

proved by everyone. You think of the way the bindings look on the outside, and the way your thoughts " look to others, before you utter them. You've not read a new book,, nor had a new emotion, for years " ,;. "What nonsense you're talking," Millie interrupted. And Patty walking along to the library, dropped the subject and began about the visit of Mrs. Grainger-Munn. She had a wire that morning, saying this lady was coming within a week for a visit. -Tomorrow Great Expectations

Toronto claims to have a higher percentage of telephones than any other city in the British empire, one to every five of its inhabitants.

NEWS Chapter 12 It seemed to Patty, sitting there on the floor listening to her sister's complaints, that the whole istuation was hopeless. She hated to ask questions, yet if she had to help Millie find a solution, she certainly had to understand the problem better than she did. She

really hated being made a confident, t at all the Dook3 rve gotj

.Marriage in iier minu was Buiueuunig sacred, something that concerned two people only. No others should be told either its joys or its unfortunate fail.ures." She said finally: "I think you've narrowed your life too much. You haven't enough ininterests outside of Humphrey. You see him all the time, and never anyone else, except the women who play cards." Millie restlesly moving her should-

Patty looked, giad to escape the less agreeable subject of Humphrey's short comings. She wanted to borrow some books anyway. Millie "library" was gorgeously new. Uniform sets of Scott, Dickens, Thackery, and Shakes-

,'uiiiiiMiiiinifiiffiitHmintHiiiiiiiiiniHiifmiiiiHUHiiiMmiiiiliititiiHiinmitiim ! REFRIGERATORS I I at 1

behave I could chaperone ; iook3 iike nart of nrnhiPm riav. nd

for that matter I'm mar- so does Keith. Come on let's make!

j up a plot." I i "All right." It wa3 unusual for I Graham Browne to take a hand in

Lee's nonsense-, but tonight he did not

noueh to the party.

ried!" Yet she could not thrust aside the realization that Madame Brabant and others of her set would have looked

askance at tne names or me guesia, . hesitate. "A man is engaged in putting and commented on the fact that there I over a shady deal of some sort a big was no older woman present. tneft Kav and to throw the authorShe could not forget, either, the mo-jitie3 off the track, he invites a group ment when Keith Gilbert had held her of friends to his country house on the in his arms. His eyes reminded her very night when ih swag ls t0 be

ol it every time pne loonea ai mm, anu concealed there. They are eminently

she was conscious that they were

proper people, not

i engage themselves

all the kind to anything pecu-

nals she had eeen.

ior nrr nm to turn ii ui u auu i um- , ,

I the installation.

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fixed on her often when she did not

dare to meet them. It made her un-;

easy made her feel disloyal to herj u,,,,,,H,,Mm,m,mni,,,,,,m husband, despite his gift to her of: BATHE TODAY freedom. Yet she liked it. I Don't wait until Satnrdav von'll I

She felt uneasy, too, about the sig-i n1nv u CarHr nnri tc wto- Qn I

It was difficult , the week and he heaUhler for it

J'illr' JlUlt Willi iiiui. irannu tv te'.l him of the lights she had seen on . i ..i . . . 1 . . .. . ..1. L . , . U

tne liver, anu tut- icumitv mi sut, j had overheard, just before Keith came 1 into the house. Yet that would have semed like disloyalty to Keith. She stared down into the corsage bouquet of yellow orchids that she had found at her plate, and tried to seem attentive to the rather racy story that Guy Selden was telling. It was a tale of boot legging the usual story of that kind, elaborated and dramatized until Sally felt that she would scream before it was over. She often felt that Selden was con-; scious of himself as part of one of his own plays. He was tall, thin, and and grotesquely homely. His con-; versation was "tempered to the shorn j debutante," as he put it; he was risque with the giddy flapper, and mildly j conventional with the demure young

widow whose pose was consciously un-

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