Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 88, 13 April 1922 — Page 5
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, 1ND., THURSDAY, APRIL 13. 1922.
PAGE FIVii
KLUMPH Ci
MAKUUtEITt MEAL
MHO'S WHO AM) WHITS IIAITKNKD. RICHARD HKAUANT, a successful ynunn lawyer, has (rtvpn a year's leave of abupnce to his wife, SAM.Y, h'ipln that she will learn nonit'thlng of life during that time. She bi'frlno hv tnoetlnpr KEITH GIL.BKKT. always labelled "Dangerous." and through him associating with New York's gayest crowd of celebrities of the artistic world, among thm I.ee CraiK, a pretty artist; Guy Peldon. a nlavwrtKht. anil Graham
Browne, a financier. Gilbert makes no secret of his love for her, nor does PATUTCIA liOKING, a modern flapper, make any secret of her fondness to rhim. She (toes to a dance club with BARBARA LANK, an old-fashioned wife, and her husband and their truest. SEAL CAMtOl'.N, and these sees Gilbert with Patricia. Calhoun Intimated that Gilbert is not a man whom Sally should know. Sally learns that her husband, who has none West, has taken his prettv secretary with him. and is so piqued by the knowleilKe that she accepts Gilbert's Invitation to a houseparty at The Kvrie. his country piace. The evening of her arrival she sees mysterious liphts on the river and sees signals from the house. A stranne man appears to arrest Gilbert for bootlespinie. but h- 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 Barbara discovers that he is dininK at a neighbor's. On tile launch on which Gilbert and Sally escape, Gilbert forces bis attentions on her. and when she screams for help, Neal Calhoun comes to her rescue. Gilbert thinks Sally has betrayed bini and swears vengeance. Calhoun takes her to Barbara Lane's home in the country for the niirht. Keith Gilbert escapes and telephones Sally, threatening to break into her house if she does not join him in the street.
menta of their own, and all that but 1 don't know just what I could do."
"Open a tea room," suggested Sally helpfully. "I could help you "
"And we could paint the furniture
Si 'KiSfVS. 1 fit
CHAPTER XXXIV A FLAPPER AT LARGE It was Patricia Loring who scurried up the steps. A fur coat was Hung about her shoulders, and the taxi driver followed her with a huge Miitcase and a travelling bag that bulged protestingly. Patricia herself carried ill-assorted burdens; a white, grotesquely shaved poodle, a huge bottle of perfume, a gay bandox whose
scarlet ribbons were looped over her arms, and from which trailed a gauzy sash. Sally threw the door open, and Patricia collapsed in her arms. "I'm turned out!" she cried tearfully. "Dad says I'm a
msmm
It was Patricia I oring xcho scur ried vp the ttepa.
ourselves, and have cute waitresses,
and awfully good food, and charge
perfectly frightful prices," cried Pats
enthusiastically. "That's the way everybody does who makes a go of anything like that. And we'd just manage it, you and I. Or maybe a beauty shop would be better there's always a chance for a good beauty shop. "Or maybe I don't know but that I'd
rather do Something artistic, like Leet Craig" she just dashes off a magazine '
cover or a bunch of illustrations, and gets a huge price for 'em " I "But she has talent, and it's taken her years and years to get to the! place where she is now," Sally re- J ninded her. "And she's all in after' she's done this dashing you're talking j about. Tell me, what happened at The Eyrie after I" "After you and Keith disappeared j that way," finished Pats. "Wei! it j was wild. They got the lights on j again, and a lot of men simply poured j into the living room, and started to j question us all, ono by one, and Gra-1
ham Browne stepped over to the man
ptcted it? They say he must havej made a fortune out of it Guy Selden says he bought some. One of his men shot a man in the fight they had did you know that? Guy says it will go very hard with Keith when they find him!" "But 'maybe they won't find him," suggested Sally.
"Oh, yes they will I heard this evening that they'd got the yacht he
was planning to escape on. where d you go with him, anyway?"
"I went lo Barbara's house," Sally
answered quietly. "It was foolish to run away ,of course, but I didn't think what I was doing. Now, why not get
some sleep? You look tired to death."
"Well, I am." Patricia's brightness
laded as she drooped down among the pillows. "Dad and I had an awful scene it lasted for hours. He treat
ed me as if I were a child!" "Instead of a grown-up debutant!
Well, curl up here and have a nap,
before we open that tea room!
Patricia shifted the poodle to the foot of the chaise longue, stuff! "an extra pillow under her heart, and sighed comfortably. But Sally turned away from her own bed; she could not sleep, worried as she was. Keith would not escape then, and flee to some far-off country; he would be caught, would implicate her as retaliation for her supposed treachery. She wondered if he would ever believe that she had not betrayed him to Neal Calhoun. Well, after all it mattered little what Keith Gilbert thought of her. She hoped that they would never meet agin. It seemed to her that she looked back across a great gulf to the days
before she met him again, the days
when her life was marked by nothing more exciting than attending a bridge party or dining out with her husband. And now "Oh, if this tangle ever straightens itself out I'll never get into another!" she vowed, as she tumbled into bed. Tomorrow At The Lane's Again.
Heart Problems
Dear Mrs. Thompson: I am a perplexed mother. I have a daughter sixteen years old. She has two boy friends who come to see her once a wek. Besides going with these two friends she goes with some of her other boy friends to ice cream parlors or to the show. She thinks this is all right, while I think it is all wrong. Please tell me who Is right. A PERPLEXED MOTHER. I think you are right. A girl of sixteen is too young to spend most of her time and thought on boys. It is a period in her life when she should be getting her education and when she should have plenty of sleep so that ehe will be a strong, healthy
woman. She cannot go witn dos an the time and get enough sleep at night.
I would advise you to limit the number of nights she can spend in the company of boys. Friday and Saturday nights are good because she does not have school the following day.
Lutheran with the ficiating.
church Thursday morning, Rev. F. C. McCorinick ot-
MRS. MARY THAREF H ANNA'S CREEK, Ind., April 13. Mrs. Mary Tharef, of Camden, is dead.
according to word received here by
Ola Samuels, a brother.
was injured in a runaway accident several days ago. She is survived by her husband, Peter Tharef, and three sons and two daughters; two brothers and one sister.
The oldest Christian church is f-t
Mrs. Tharef Echmiarzon, Armenia.
SEEKS DIVORCE FROM HUSBAND, 81 YEARS OLD VALPARAISO, Ind.. April 13. Mrs. Rhoda A. Johnson of this city, 75 years old, has brought suit for a divorce from her husband, Hiram O. Johnson, 81 years old, charging him with cruelty in that he threw chairs at her.
Called by Death
MRS. CATHERINE SOWERS CAMBRIDGE CITY, Ind., April IS Funeral services for Mrs. Catherine Sowers, of Pershing, who died Tuesday, were to have been held at the
FKKI.S I.IKR A EW VO)U "I was a sufferer from kidney trouble for several years." writes Mrs. Arthur Pemulle. R.F. D. 1, Grasmere, X. H., 'and suffered so much I felt completely lame all over. Since I have been taking Foley Kidney Pills I am not so lame. My back ached all the time and mv eyes were all a blur. Now I can see fine and feel Vike a different woman. Since. 1 have taken two bottles of Foley Kidney Pills I don't have that tired feel ins. I can do my own work now." They bring quick results. A. G. Luken Drug Co., Main. Advertise ment.
iin charge and gave him his card and
lnc Klmiiph disgrace, and Mum- they went off to a corner and talked
sie says she'll send me to the country and talked, and the man came back to live with Grandma! And I ran and said we could go. I can't imagine away I telephoned you from a drugjhow it leaked out and got into the tore 1 won't stay home another sin-j papers about who was there, though pie minute!" of course we all had to give our real Almost laughing in her relief, Sally! names. I made up a gorgeous name took the travelling bag, dragged the Lorraine St. Vincent, but Graham suitcase into a corne.r and followed ! told me that was no good, and they Patricia to her own room. Such a dif-j laughed at me." forent Pats from the gay daring ; "But you mean that was all?" young creature who had sat on the j Sally was incredulous. Keith had lied table in Giddy Gilbert's living room j to her, then he had made her think at The Eyrie throwing kisses to the; that safety lay in running away with men who toasted her! I him, when she had really been running "You don't mind having Susy and j straight into danger, me, do you?" Patricia demanded, as "Yes, oh, of course they were looke dropped down on the chaise ing in the bushes and all around for longue. "Just till we can find some-i;ou and Keith; they were crazy to where else to stay. I thought maybe ; find him. Isn't it exciting to think I could earn my living somehow jthat he's been bringing in stuff to i'-u!s of girls do, and have little apart-' drink all this time and we never sus-
u n n
Wild Rice Hominy Grits Chocolate-Covered Yeast Salt-Rising Bread Idaho Strained Honey Bran Cookies
Genuine Gluten Flour New Pure Maple Sugar Real Holland Cocoa Pure Bran Bread Imported Maccaroni Fresh Figs and Dates
Have you heard a Dance Piece, Popular Song, or one of the old-time Melodies on . Gennett Records? You will derive more pleasure from your phonograph (regardless of make) if you use Gennett Records because they are better. Just Try One! THE STARR PIANO COMPANY 931-35 Main Street, Richmond,
IpEa st e"eT , HI kXtt'
Here is competent testimony. Mr. Flesh, as head of the United States Grain Corporation in St. Louis, knew that only the choicest premium, sound wheat was ever bought for Valier's Enterprise Flour. Mrs. Flesh, as a practical housekeeper, knows that Valier's Enterprise Flour produces quality and uniformity in baking that she can get with no other flour. Mrs. Flesh is willing to go to extra trouble and expense to have us send her this flour through a St. Louis retailer.
You can get it at your local grocer's for only a few cents more than you would pay for ordinary flour. . And that little extra will come back to you quickly because with Enterprise you don't have baking failures, and you get at least four loaves more from a sack.
wfaf
1, ... -i-J:-'; 1..
(;iiiMiuii:iMHiittMiiiiT!niMiiiitnuiiiiiniMiiiiiiiuniuniuiniMiiuHiiiMiHiiitniHi I WELDON'S 1
Formerly
Reed for
Furniture Co.
Porch Furniture
tlllUllllMllliMlllllinlUIIlillllltllilHIHIIIIIilllllllinllltlH'lHIIIIMMMIMMIMItll Miniiiiimimm:,fT:m!;iinllllim:mi!iMHimtlmtlimmilimMHHtMllllimm We Repair All Makes Electric Irons HART'S ELECTRIC SHOP 1
!7 Main Phone 2434 iim-iiimiuiirt iMHtriiniHimiimiHiiimniMMinmiim.ifiHinm.mii
-: 10:
BATHE TODAY Don't wait until Saturday you'll enjoy it . arlier and U el better all th' week and be healthier for it. Just phone MEERHOFF. 1236 for th- installation. 9 S. 9th St.
7 fe I
j
t 11 nMTiflE, ,r -n 43:
t v j i i m i iv j i
if-
PHOTOS
MAIN ST RJCMMONQ INCt
There's Superb
HOT CROSS BUNS
I,arpe size ones, too! fre.h all day Friday, them hot. Special Friday, per dozen
Baked Servo 20c
3
I y C- ! u 1 p N hi M
Wonderful and Quality in Our
Shoes for Easter
There's wonderful variety in our Easter Footwear displays all the way from plainest Oxfords to Sport Shoes trimmed in gay eolors. Patent Leather is the leather for spring Pumps. Suede, Satin and Kid also are used. There are many new Pumps, with straps ; there are Colonials, with a hidden strap ; then there are wonderful new ideas in Oxfords. But why try to tell you all? Come in today or before Easter and see these beautiful styles.
$6.85 to $9.00
u)STom 8
Pre-Easter Values in 6
7
earing
A
for
Boys
ppare.
Men and
ft.
One Lot of Men's All-Wool Suits Blues or browns, sizes 34 to 46, $22.50 values; special this week $1S.95 Young Men's Suits Greys and blues, in sizes 15 to 20, either single or doublebreasted, $22.50 values; special this week for only $lS.9o One Lot of Boys' All-Wool Suits Greys, browns and blue serge, with one or two pairs lined trousers, sizes 8 to 17 years, $10.50 and $11.50 values: special this week
for only
33.
3
IS
ll
"..SSS ill
BOYS' SUITS Fancy greens or browns, one pair lined trousers, sizes 7 to 18 years; special this week. .$G.-18 ONE LOT OF JUVENILE SUITS All-wool blue serge, either Norfolk or Middy styles, sizes 3 to 8 years ; very special this week $4.S5 MEN'S DRESS TROUSERS Blue, grey or brown serges, sizes 31 to 40 waists, $5.00 values; special this week, a pair $-1.39 ONE LOT OF MEN'S DRESS SHIRTS Plain colors and fancy stripes, either collar attached or neckband, sizes 141 to 17; special 9S? MEN'S and BOYS' NECKTIES A host of snappy patterns. Very special 50?
.
8or JkrAiy X NEW SYSTEM BAKERY 913 Main St. 45 st- jSss' jS's
sTS' .vSW 5!S5 flNS1 aJKS' jcSSiS' .vSV .,CW kw .xv . ' "
-ts srs& jm js$?
