Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 93, 19 April 1922 — Page 5
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND., WEDNESDAY, APRIL 19, 1922
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her tears. It was a romantic phrase, he had read it somewhere. Thafs the worst of it!" Millie burst out "Now 111 never get away from here, even for a time." -v Humphrey was too hurt for anger.
Ho' who ad whits i dragging step. The links were in ex-' He said nothing for along time, while " Richard Bra"a?afu"eM lped her eyes and violently pawor, ha given a year's leave of ab- was ivigorating, delightful. Ordinarily em-e to his wire. she would have begun the game full . Dle,.a. veJ7. .red and srn nos.e-
i uu uuu i seem 10 consider me
IllUHiaWlt bv MAHGI'IRIT KCAU
Sully.
i changed from a butterfly to a woman
that
hoping
something
she will
of life.
b
She
I by learning
meets Keith Gilbert, always labelled "llanKerous," and through him associates with New York's gayest crowd of celebritles; among them, Lee Craig, a pretty artist, and Graham lirowne, a well-known financier. The gay life that Sally leads "Is not approved by her friend.
- liaroara lane. an oia-iasnionea wiie. :bul Is shared by
' Patricia Coring, a moaern riapper, who resents the fact that Gilbert Is
svniadlv in love with Sally as she wants
Milm for herself. With Sally she goes to jTa house-party at Gilbert's country
I V'Piate. anil is tner wnen revenue omcf tjt rs appear to arrest Gilbert on a charge i wot bootleeging on a big scale, and bei ft cause one of his men has killed an of-
, Sfiieer curing a Ilgnt. .iiioeri iiees into i the night, taking Sally with him, and J
f. .'tries to kidnap her, but she is rescued f! I by
Neal Calhoun, who Is trailing Gilbert. Gilbert accuses Sally of betraying him to Calhoun and vows vengeance. He Is imprisoned, but escapes. Sally goes with Harhara Lane and her husband, Andrew, to a house-party at the Kan-ualla'.
i
CHAPTER XXXIX NEW DANGER ,.J THREATENS For a moment the world swam about Sally; the floor of the veranda seemed 10 rise toward her, and the gaily patterned chintz that covered the furniture of the living room behind him melted into a blur of vivid color. She closed her eyes, and leaned against the great pillar beside which she stood. She had supposed that he was hiding Homvwhere .trying to escape iajpiisorrtiicrit and there he stood,
'.fCSTSw-' facing her, non-
Mm
Heart Problems
Ml
1 l
' RfftW J eyes, that she had ! i Brown to hat, and ' h&$S 1 tear. He was ai
Hirwri"rBiywMw ti living, wuio no t
V
chalant, perfectly
at ease, his hazel eyes mocking her discomforture. Somehow she got
control of her.se!
and met
i
g ines Kiiimph he stood there with ' "J lie sunlit room behind him, his tweed i ;goH" clothes emphasizing the tall lithe.UiH.srf of hi iifiure. And as she stared g '. lie laughed, softly," mockingly. Sally i J Hhlvered with appreliension. lie had ? J said that he would get even with her, i i that she had not seen the last of him. i ! He thought that she had betrayed him I I he would never believe her innocWnt. 1 A girl who had been among the I guest? at the Randall dinner the even1 ine before joined him. and a moment
latpr they crossed the veranda to Sally's side. "Mrs. Brabant Mr. Owen" Sally
heard the names without realizing
what else the girl was saying only at that last name did she find herself capable of looking at him again. "Owen " she repeated it deliberately. "You look so much like a man I used to know, Mr. Owen a man named Keith Gilbert."
"Oh yes, he laughed, but she saw
that the hands that held his cap were
- suddenly clenched till the knuckles were white. "You surely don't mean that chap who was arrested for bootlegging on a wholesale scale, do you? I read about him in the papers." "Yes; I do," she answered; a curious sort of courage, a raging defiance, mastered her fear ot him. "He was arrested not long ago." "And escaped.' 'he added. "He got away clean and they can't find any trace of him". "By the way. Mrs. Brabant, I'd like to play with you this
Gilbert wfc BaXty to ptay with him. of zest. But for her the sun had clouded over, and the day's beauty was dimmed. She was too nervous to play well;
OUl Ol piacuie uiuugn uaiuaia asi
she played a better game than Sally did, and finally on the fourth hole Sally sent the ball that she and
Browne were playing straight into the
woods that approached the course on that side. i "Oh, I'm playing abominably!" she cried, ready to cry with vexation and fright, as the caddies went scuffling into the wood3 to search for the ball. "Why don't we let these people who
those i are playing behind us go through, and
rest a moment?" "Good idea," exclaimed Andy, and sauntered back to meet Keith Gilbert and his companion. Browne had gone into the woods with Barbara, and Sally was alone lor a moment. Watching Andy, she saw with distress that he talked for an instant with Keith, then followed the others into the woods. TIip girl who was with Keith had driv
en her ball into a bunker, and was playing it out. some distance back. As Keith approached her, she sat grimly waiting. She could not run, could not escape him; she would face it out now, whatever he chose to do. "I must se you alone," he told her, curtly. "When will it be? "There's no time to lose." "I don't know I can't oh, I never want to se you again!" she cried in desperation. "'That makes no difference. When will you see me?" She stared into his eyes for a long moment, hopelessly. They were merciless. "You can't make me do it I won't " she began, but he caught her by the shoulder with a grasp so pitiless that it hurt.
"You will see me today or I will give the papers this whole story. I will implicate you in such a way that nothing you say can free you from the stain I'll put on your name. You'll be ashamed to face anyone's who's ever even heard of you. Now, how about it? Will you see me at once, or shall I let myself be arrested again and drag you into it?" "But if I do as you ask what difference will it make?" she asked wearily.
'I promise not to demand another
much," he said finally. "At least people will be sorry for you. They'll think you're an innocent victim.
tneyii say I was seven kinds or a
fool to go in on that scheme I'm sorry. Millie."
"It's all right," Millie answered, ac
cepting his apology, and perhaps realizing all the shame and sorrow he felt and was too awkward to express. "You can't get away from me, if you mean by that taking a long trip," he said after a time. "But if you want to get out of this town, we can do that I'll have to take a job somewhere we can go anywhere you'd like." This was a ray of comfort. "What shall we do?" Millie asked.
"God knows," he answered, sink
ing into a chair. "I haven't thought that far. The next thing to do is to
tell your mother. I might as well go and get it over now no, I think I could stand it better after supper. Let's eat." 1 Millie attempted to carry off her red eyes at dinner by assuming a great air of dignity and telling Bridget to make her tea for her headache. But these pretences availed little
in awing Bridget. She was a willing and good-natured servant, but there was something in the way she waited on the table, something in her tone
when she spoke and the way she settled her shoulders when walking from the room, that made Millie feel little and inferior and Millie was not overly sensitive. At the end of the meal, Bridget announced calmly that she was leaving.
Humphrey cut short her explanations
That means everyone knows," he
said gloomily. "Phone over and ask! in anything paying good returns
from her chair, a little, bent figure that suddenly seemed to tower, i "Mine all gone?" Tomorrow Pattv tn the Rescue
BROWN EYES Consult r a physi-! cian in regard to children. He will KAPP, GERMAN REVOLUTION perhaps be able to make your desire; LEADER, HELD AT LEIPSIC possible. , ' . BERLIN, April 19 Dr. Wolfgang Dear Mrs. Thompson Please tell Kapp, leader of the 1920 uprising in me how to keep the charm of the good- Berlin, has arrived at Leipsic. where luck ring. Does it have to be given e is being detained pending action 6 , TTTXT by the Leipsic supreme court on his to you, or do you buy It? ; HELEN. demand for trial - I am not familiar with the lore of. ; the good-luck ring.. If you know where ! i it. . y. ohla """""aaBaaaassas
to tell you the secret of its charm. ' Dear Mrs. Thompson Will you
please tell me how to place bread and butter plates, also salad, when served with the meal? . EDITH. Bread and butter plates are placed above the service plates slightly to the left with the butter spreader across the upper right-hand side of the plate with the blade turned toward the. center of the plate. The salad
when served with the main course is placed above the service plate slightly to the right. I perfect person was held up for public
criticism. ; ' ; So now she was torn between two' emotions. One was genuine grief and terror over the loss of Humphrey's little fortune, the other an unconsci-. ous . feeling of satisfaction over the discovery of a great flaw. in her son-in-law. .. - ! "Poor Millie, whatever will you do?" she began. "Of course I've some money you can always live with me."( In her mind she saw the two families united something she had always secretly, longed for. She saw; them living under on roof where her word was law. Before, in any family matter, it was Humphrey, not she, who decided the thing. She had to do as he told her. They were always perfectly friendly, of ' course onlyi Humphrey was "boss.". Now j "You'll have to live with me,"i
Humphrey announced grimly. "Fori
your money went in with mine, and
j that's gone too. You told me to invest
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mother and Patty to come here
They came Mrs. Parke in a pink silk shawl with fringe which gave her an oddly frivolous appearance She was a very small woman with hair so gray it was impossible to tell what color it had been. Millie looked like her, Patty resembled her father'
iamiiy, ana Dore scarcely a trace oil
her mother's features or coloring. Mrs. Parke had dry hair that ran into crisp little curls, shrewd little dark eyes surrounded by fine wrink
les, and a thin nose. Once she had been very pretty, with a tongue andj a wit as sharp as her nose. But, as j is so often the case, her wit turned J to sarcasm, and with advancing age, j the sarcasm became less witty and j more hurtful. Now it had settled j
down into habitual lamentation and complaint. She had an uncanny ability to see another person's fault. And as the
human race is full of faults, and the-
faults are apt to be more spectacular than the virtues, Mrs. Parke had gained a reputation for great keenness and insight into character. "I always said so," she was apt to remark "grimly, when some previously
this thing promised to be absolutely
"Mine gone too!" Mrs. Parke rose
v hiornine: may I?"
Y She gasped at his audacity, even as interview," he replied. "See me just she realized that this was practically once more and then send me away a command. If she refused there was j forever if you want to." no telling what he might do. There j He was watching her with narrow V ' were several people on the veranda, eyes, as intently as if a great deal but they were all some distance away. I were at stake. She wondered even
The members of her own party had j then at his eagerness accustomed as
gone down to the first tee, and were too far away to be of immediate as sistance if she should need them. , "I'm sorry to ' refuse you, but I'm flaying with some friends Graham HJiowne, and the Lanes." She looked Jhim squarely in the eyes as she proenounced Browne's name; surely he jjvould realize his folly when he, knew ..that Browne was there, and would Jftyeadily expose the fact that he was Xtppparing under an assumed name. "Yes?" He seemed only mildly interested. "I wonder I think I've met 4Juis Browne man perhaps he'd let me
slut in, in his place. That your party
he was to taking what he wanted, she
could not understand this attitude that was so new to him. "Very well I will see you at the dance here at the club this evening," she. told him at last, and he turned
away just as Andy Lane came out of! the woods with the caddies. j Tomorrow A Useless Appeal.
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ilown at the first tee?
She nodded, wretchedly. She could not help marvelling at his reckless
ness. "But I'd much rather play with i
Mr. Browne we have a bet on the match," she told him. "Then why don't you play with me?" the pretty girl at his side cut in. "Come on I want you to, really, and t;he doesn't." , She was a charming thing, a debutante barely out of the flapper stage, and her audacity in going straight aftrr what she wanted reminded Sally of Patricia Loring. "We'll play right behind them, so i." this awful crush you've suddenly developed on Mrs. Brabant makes you want to gaze admiringly at her all the jrt'inie, you'll have a chance to gratify T.vur longing." With a sinking heart Sally realized that she could not escape him, and went down to join the others with a
After Ten Years I By MARION RUBINCAM !
I
MRS. PARKE Chapter 32. Meantime, serenely thinking that as yet no one knew what, had happened. Humphrey, Millie and Patty and Mrs. Parke were holding a family conclave. At first, when Millie realized that everything was gone, and that her cherished trip abroad had to be given up, she indulged in a long and comforting cry. Humphrey, at first on the defensive when he told the news, nervously read to defend himself against the accusations he was sure were coming, now softened at the sight of Millie's extreme dejection. He patted her shoulder, and tried to tret an arm
around her as she crouched down in
the big armchair. "Never mind, we have each other!" he said once, moved to a sentimental statement by the continued sight of
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