Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 85, 10 April 1922 — Page 5
fHE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND., MONDAY, APRIL 10, 1922. .
PAGE FIVE
' ifGlili J--'". "- Illustrated kii MAKGUSBni Mill
WHO'S WHO AND WHAT'S ' niCHAKD BIIABANT, a successful vountr lawyer, has jriveu a year's leave f absence to his wife. , . SALLy, hoping that she will learn omething of life during that time, bne seglns by meeting ,, . KEITH GILliEUT, always labelled "Dangerous, 'and through him associating with New York's gayest crowd of celebrities of the artistic world, among them Lee Craig, a pretty artist. Ouv Selden. a nlav wrltrht and Gra
ham Browne, a financier. Gilbert
maKes no secret of his love ror ner, nor does PATRICIA LOr.ING, a modern flapper, make anv secret of her fondness for him. Sully goes to a dance club with BARBARA LANE, who Is an oldfashioned wife, and her husband and thr-ir guest. N'EAL CALHOUN, and there sees Gilbert with Patricia. Calhoun intimates that Gilbert la not a man whom Sally should know. Sally learns that her husband, who has gone West, ha3 taken his pretty secretary with him, and is so piqued by the knowledge that she accepts Gilbert's Invitation to a house-party at the Evrie, his country place. The evening of her arrival she sees mysterious lights on the river and sees signals from the house. A strange man appears to arrest Gilbert for bootlegging, but he escapes to a launch on the river, taking Sally with him. Barbara and Andy quarrel about Sally. Andy does not come home for dinner, and Rarbara discovers that he Is dinXnF. l J? neighbor's. On the launch on which Gilbert and Sally escape, Gilbert forces his attentions on her, and when she screams for help, Neal Calhoun f,tnes to her rescue. Gilbert thinks really has betrayed him and swears vengeance. Calhoun takes her to Barbara Lane's home In the country for the night. CHAPTER XXXI IN DANGER To Sally that Sunday -was interminable. Even speculation over Neal Calhoun's insistence that she dine with her motheT-inlaw failed to Jinterest her. It was a chance remark of Madame Brabant's that aroused her late in the afternoon when she was wondering if the time had not almost come when she could suggest going , home. "I see that another liquor and drug ring has been discovered," she re
marked complacently.
and when at last she reached her own
apartment and her own room, she
sank down on the bed with a low, sob-
3-0
tery is not yet known," she read. "But her Identity will soon, be revealed. She is known to have been Gilbert's constant companion recently, and to be a member of a well-known 'New York family!" She, Sally Brabant, a woman of mystery, sought in connection with a murder easel . Tomorrow A Woman of Mystery.
'Big excitement ladv"' he tatit her
,"ra ring man shot " bing cry. Home had seemed so remote, so inaccessible. She looked about her at the familiar, luxurious appointments, then noted almost fear
fully that the dogwood that Keith Gil
After Ten Years By MARICN RUBINCAM
1 IM t
- I kUNA
1 M KENT
REFRESHING FACE TREATMENTS
If you are frightfully tired and are in that uncomfortable stae when you dislike the sight of your own face in
ja looking glass,-try a hot and cold treatment. When -you are very tired,
if you are at all like most women, your face will seem to have a shadow over it which won 't, wash off, the skin will be dry, every pore will show, powder won't stick and your hair will not lie becomingly around your face;
what she said. It was the result of and to tell him that you are very sor-
HATRED. Chapter 24. Mrs. Grainger-Munn had left she had kissed Patty good-bye and told her she must come to her If she wanted anything at all. and that if she grew lonely, her home in the city and ter old, pleasant position would be waiting fo her. She kissed Millie goodbye, and shook hands with Humphrey. "Your one of the few genuine men that I've had the good luck to meet" she said. She even kissed Mrs. Parke, who saw her off, a pink shawl around her shoulders. And Wissakeagan settled down again into its usual activities. Patty played tennis with Jimmy,
and danced at the Saturday night
dances with Basil who still said, "Oh absolutely," every other time he opened his mouth.
"Though the airs the noor nut on r
nowadays and the wages they charge j n addition to which ycu will probably when you want them to work for vou. notice wrinkles. It is just the time
bert had sent her the morning before makes me wonder what society is com-j for a not aEd cold treatment. " 1 in m nXan 1 I m T-fc I ..
ins i". ue ourveu irequenuy. But Don t use soar. First of all wring
she labored until her back and head j a large wash cloth or an old towel ached dizzily to make the bazaar prof-1 from hot water and lay it over the
the new, terrible restlessness that had succeeded her previous equally terrible aimlessness. Something had happened to Millie She had developed one of those curious, desperate attachments which older women sometimes have for young and good look-
i In? men. Sho thnue-ht nf PauL ,he
Both i a -p ampA uhmit him hp stnnri for ev-
rub a little witch hazel over it
these are astringent and stimulating
Then ue a little powder on the skin among men.
ana look at yourself once more in tne And she did at last hate Humphrey, glass. Your skin will be - young and Tomorrovv-Eutanglements.
rerresneu, your eyes wmcn were xireu, will be bright and you will look made over. I J. K. C rlf you massage your legs j with cocoa butter it will fatten them,! but to make them more shapely you
should develop the muscles that pro-
ry and would like another. You might assure him that the seqond will not meet with the same fate if you can prevent it. ,'-': , Since you care f o much for the boy, it would be very foolish to drop him. Value him as a friend. ...
Help! we're running out of Blue
ery thing charming and entertaining i Devil ads. $25.00 for the best, $5.00
iur every one we can use. Advertisement.
Heart Problems
Try the hot and cold treatment.
was still on her dressing table. Hurrying across the room, she threw open a window and flung the offending flowers far out into space. A a she Rtnod thprp sti the window.
wntrhinp- th nnrrinir ctrpam of motors i spasmodically at sweaters, gossiped
on the Drive below, a newsbovs' shrill : with Cora and Maude, and tried to get
itable.
And Millie
played bridge, knitted
x
voice rose on the night air. Then an
other and still another! "Extry! Extry! -All about" the words were confused in a meaningless jumble; then, repeated, one or two coming to her "bootlegging" "Gil-
Madame Bra- bert"
bant always had She ran to summon her maid and or-
the air of having 1 dered the girl to get her a paper; then, created the day's ' hesitating to let the maid know that
news herself. "Scandalous and some quite prominent people were
involved 1. 41. 4.
1VULTW Lllilt. 11 1 lie I Patricia Loring,,
she was interested, she went down to
the front door, and, shivering in the cold and drawing her silken robe close about her, waited until . she could
Yon 'catch the attention of one of the
little shouting boys.
At last one of them came running
Ioes Klumph
don't you, Sally?
She's mixed up in! it somehow."
It seemed to Sally that her heart stood still. The 'names were in the paper, then. What about hers? "There were others too quite a bunch of them," Andy was saying. "Scandal in high life! The chap who writes all those wild farces, and .the. girl who does so many magazine covers quite racy, I'd say!" "Well, people ought to be punished if they're going to be mixed up in such affairs women, especially!" Madame Brabant declared. "Probably she was deeper in it than the men were. And that little Patricia Loring she made her debut only this year. Her poor mother! Of course, Patricia has always been wild. And a man was shot, the paper say a revenue officer. Now, do you suppose Patricia " Sally mumbled an excuse and escaped to the conservatory. Her mother-in-law would have Pats shooting the man. the first thing anyone knew! And what if she, Sally Brabant, had stood up before that smug lile group and said: "I was there, too, only I ran away! I escaped on a
launch with the man who was responsible for the whole thing, and he tried 'ft to kidnap me. What would they have said then? Back at Barbara's again, she scanned the papers, fearing somehow her frame might have crept into one of them. She told herself that she was a coward for trying to dodge the consequences of her lolly, and then ex- ' cused herself by remembering that, after all, she had had nothing to, do with the whole affair, and that coming forward and confessing her presence at The Eyrie could not help in any way. She 'phoned to town for her car,
up the cteps; small, dirty faced, hisj thin body huddled up against the cold. He drew one leg up against the other j as he stood waiting for his money, and j Sally noticed how drawn and shrunken he looked. Yet his interest in his wares was vivid. "Big excitement, lady," he told her with a grin, as she took the paper. . Drug ring man shot " his eyes widened as she thrust a dollar bill into his hand and told him not to mind about change. "Gosh thanks!" he cried, a3 he cuttled away down the steps. Despite the fear that seemed to grip her throat in iron fingers, Sally found herself pitying him. Yet he was happier, more care-free than -she was. " The newspaper was one of the most sensational now it blazoned its scanty facts in huge headlines, and supplemented them with little reading matter. : " Yet there was enough for Sally. Keith Gilbert had been captured, after escaping into the night with one of the women who had been at his bungalow the paper called it a "ove nest!" And during the night he had escaped a second time.
Sally hardly knew whether to be sorry or glad. If Keith liad really escaped, he would get out of the country at once she was sure of that. Doubtless he would manage. to reach the yacht of which he had spoken, and go to the Bahama Islands, as ,he had planned. She drew a long sigh of relief; she would be glad to have him safely out of the country. She read on, hating the very words that told her what the authorities had given out about the case. And then she came to a paragraph that seemed printed in letters of tlame. They seared into her mind. "The name of the woman of mys-
the visiting minister to dinner on the night she knew Mrs. Werner wanted him. It was all as it was before r And yet it was not. For something had happened to Patty. She developed suddenly a curious aloofness, though she was as sweet and charming as ever. - "She acts as though she had her head in the clouds the whole time," her mother put it. "She's so changed Millie, do you suppose she's going to marry Basil? I hope so!" HATRED No one thought that Patty had fallen in love with one of the pleasant young visitors. But the great change was in Millie. And it could not be concealed. One day Cora walked into Snyder'3 drugstore, to find Millie at the counter with jars of cold cream before her. A young drug clerk with dry yellow hair and a slight lisp was saying: "Thith cream ith recommended as a
skin, i Hen massage in a generous amount of cold cream, rubbing it thoroughly into the face and neck with the firger tips. Then wring " the cloth ence more from hot water and hold this over the face. Repeat this two or three times,, the last time wiping off all the cream remaining on the surface, of .1 be skin. Then wring the cloth out of cold water, if possible from ice. water and hold this over the face and neck. The treatment is more effective if you can take a piece of ice and finish up with a few minutes' massage with it. Its extreme cold is most refreshing and stimulating and will close up all those ugly larpe pores. If you have no ice tpray ihe face with, toilet water or
Dear Mrs. Thompson: f have a boy friend whom I care very much for, although I don't think he cares for me. " , I see him at shows, basketball games and parties. He always talks to me but never asks to take me home. When I am at the same party he is, lie always pays more attention to me than to any of the other girls. He has given me several presents and his picture, but I lost the latter. Do you think I should ask him for another? He is considered good-looking nd all the girl friends are wild about him. Do you think he cares for me? Should I drop his friendship and go with other boys, which I have never done since I have been going with him? I have had several chances but have never taken them. R. M. L..
You seem to be looking for some-j thinr in worrv ahnnt Tho vnnn? man I
j ' -r .. .... . a -- j "-"a i
uuue Rrnce. uancms Will neiD you I fwtsinlv likp. von nr hp w,nnlrl not
accomplish this. 'show so much interest in you. Since JEAN. You can increase your his picture has been lost, it would be weight ty drinking plenty of milk, all rght to mention the fact to him
uave on ana grape juice will also aid. The latter, is taken three times each day with the meals and the quantity is a tablespoonful of each taken together. - M. M. M. A high grade castile soap is always one in which there is olive, oil. It is often alluded to an as "olive oil soap" to designate it from soaps made from a lower grade of oil, although they will also contain olive oil but of a poorer quality. - High grade castile is a good soap for a dry skin. All Inquiries addressed to Mrs. Foroes In care of the "Baautv Chits" department will be an3werelln these columns in their turn. This requires considerable time, however, osriws to the gr'eat number received. . So. if a personal or quicker reply is desired. A stamped and self-addressed env-elaps must I") enclosed with the ouestioj. The Editor
The Mother Can Have the Child's Beautiful Complexion Shs had it when she was a child. She can have it again with
The soap that gives nature a chance
.10 snow every woman ner own beauty.
Now 10
JAMES S. KIRK & CO.
uucago
plant them, and his fae as far down in his tie as he could get it, and again began to think hard. . Once Millie forgot - and dropped a "But one couldn't do that," at the bridge club. "Putting on airs, isn't she?" asked Jane Clouder, who hated Millie. Millie overheard "the whisper, and was careful.
Millie decided that since she was go-
best loved person in the world, than
to an utter stranger. But a little later he did manage
"You don't seem to like me much any more." It was as near to senti
ment as he had come for a long time.
I don t dislike you, I'm simply
Pored with you,' Millie told him
Which 'produced a storm of fury on
his part and sent him once again out
athringent cream" j ing to Italy, she had better learn Ital-f ?.fJhe house to Joe s and the pool ta-
"I never knew she was vain," Cora!ian. m'siho t 1 remarked, with all the virtue of a cold-i "There's a lot of Dagoes working at p " J at Ione tbat ,'1mnScreamless existence "To think she's i clearing lumber at the Double X. You - iHnapi' hne a8 a llttje -S-g-riT,-ft-r
been making herself beautiful all these 1 might get one of them to teach you", 1 !;"""'"miiiiiimminim minHimimiiimi:nitmm!immi!iiiiiiimmma
years " j Humphrey said, with the general mea f Xa'FT FIONT'C Patty discovered that she was buy-j that he was being witty. l VViUjUUiN O
ing all the fashion magazines and tear-j Millie surveyed him caimiy. 1 1 ing apart all her old clothes to make "How very coarse you are," she re-jf
them over. Nothing suited her, she , marked deliberately, said she wanted a "svelte line." Humphrey's pinkish
"And these dressmakers simply little pale. It was a thoughtless com-i
dont know what one is talking about! ment. It was the sort of thing any
tJAF
I 1 1 ,
m H
Formerly Reed Furniture Co. 1
face turned a'jRuss and Ref rmerators I mie-htless f(ira-: - 0 5
uiiiiiiniiin!uiiHiiiHiHinimiiiiMiiifiMtmiiniuniimiuii!uii!i!iiiiiiiiiuj:iiiiiiiiii
when. one speaks of a svelte line", she
complained.
husband in Wissakeagan would say to
his wife. It never occurred to him
The use of the indefinite pronoun, how it would sound to her. 1 which was never heard in Wissakea-j He wanted to apologize. But he had gan, sent Humphrey once more to the! that curious awkwardness which evv porch where he put his feet as highjeryone knows so well winch makes, up on the porch pillar as he could it harder to say "I'm sorry" to the'
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SHOE
STORE
GOT AfALY
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how
1 1 1
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ONE MILLION DOLLARS
representing by far the largest amount of this class of paper held by any Richmond bank. This large sum of money loaned to Wayne county people on first mortgages on real estate simply proves tha large and important part our institution has had'for more than a "half century" in making it possible for our people to become "HOMEOWNERS."
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icidnson Trust Co.
"The Oldest, Largest and Strongest Trust Company in Eastern Indiana"
3 3
if
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J "
FEDERAL KESEHVE
