Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 100, 27 April 1922 — Page 3
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THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND., THURSDAY, APRIL 27, 1922.
PAGE THREE
ROBINSON HITS BACK
AT MEN MANAGING
Paul stood for things she wanted, that she hadn't even known she wanted. 1 To Party he was the" ideal in the fleeh. When she had thought of a man
I she might love, he was like Paul. He
CAMPAIGN FOR HEW i BzB.m
Since the day of the two clippings, neither Millie nor Patty had mentioned Paul to each other. But Paul was in Patty's mind, most of the time. Even now, as Millie sat talking against marriage, her mind kept saying "no" and "no" again. "I don't want to see you marry."
I Millie said bitterly. "With your good
looks and your talent, you can make something of yourself. Not in this town, of course. You'll have to get out of It. Mother wanted you to marry Basil I did too, for awhile. He'll have money when his father dies. He is a nice boy. "But I can see what would happen there. He's a little now like Humphrey was at his age careless and happy-go-lucky and without ambition.
0
Attacking the war record of Fred King, Ralph Lemcke and Charles Jewett, campaign managers for Senator Harry S. New, Judge Arthur Robinson of Indianapolis, declared in a speech at the high school auditorium Wednesday evening, "People who live in glass
bouses should not throw stones." Asserting that the American Bar association, and numerous institutions ; of learning had never questioned the loyalty of Albert J. Beveridge, Judge Robinson took up the question of Beveridge's book, "What Is Back of the War." '.'.- "Beveridge went as a war correspondent," he declared. "Beveridge told the truth. "Beveridge made the first speech upholding the American flag at the Panhandle shop.9 in Indianapolis and immediately after he telegraphed the president, offering his services in any capacity whatsoever. Roosevelt did
likewise. I say to you that it was the j crowning ein of the administration , that It refused the services of these! two men. If Beveridge had been ac-. cepted, think of the service he might! have rendered in the intelligence de- j partment. Think of the results that!
might have been accomplished ana how much sooner the war might have ended. A short talk by J. C. Hutchlns, chairman, introduced the speaker of tho evening. , Mr. Hutchins said: "It Is necessary that we have adequate leadership In the lawmaking bodies of this country. Mr. Beveridge was trained In the school of experience. Starting . from a humble position In life, he has become what is known as a self-made man. We be
lieve that Beveridge knows how to move things." A solo by George Hodge, with Miss Glady3 Longnecker as accompanist, was a feature of the evening program. J. Leb Watkins, of Newcastle, announced at the close of Judge Robinson's speech that Beveridge would epeak at Newcastle at 7:30 o'clock Thursday evening. "I want to take this opportunity to thank the workers of the Sixth district who have stood by me so loyally," he said.
It would be all right for a few years " "No, it wouldn't!" Patty eaid emphatically. " and then It would be awfuL He'd get fat, and Indifferent, and you'd feel tied up here, you'd have ambitions of one sort, he of another no, in ten years you would feel worse than I do. "I guess men are all alike. I don't want you to marry. Do you remember that Miss Thompson, the lecturer, who used to come here once every year? She's an old maid and I believe she's th happiest woman I know. She's a lovely home 6he showed us pictures once and she adopted two little children to raise; she has a housekeeper to look after her, and the most beautiful clothes and no one to 6ay when or where she has to go, or ask her why she spent so much money " Patty had ceased to listen. She knew the arguments against marriage over and over. But. an instinct stronger than she was, protested within her. It may have been the race instinct as scientists like to call romantic love that made her give Paul virtues he
never possessed, and idealize him
an extravagant degree. Whatever it was, it gave her the only happiness
she had at this period of her life. "You needn't wotry, I'm not going to marry," she said finally. It was a tone of quiet conviction. Millie, who wanted to believe it, looked pleased and, gathering up the dishes, she went about her household affairs. . Patty helped her, and later eat out on the dark porch staring Into the night shadows. But she didn't belfeve the generali
ties Millie had been giving forth. Life with any other man would be as Millie, said. But Paul Paul was different. She couldn't imagine a scene between Paul and herself, Buch as had. occurred between Humphrey and her sister earlier this evening. She could not imagine not being in love with him, she couldn't imagine neglect, rudeness, cruelty, or even a dull and ripfl.ri mnnntonv with him
! Paul was different! Tomorrow Sympathy.
i TROUSERS RIDICULED
IN AMERICA IN 1798
A letter from one Mrs. Lloyd of
Philadelphia, written in 1798 to her, son, Robert, in London, where he was; visiting, Charles Lamb, expresses the; indignation of the times against trousers. She wrote: "I was grieved to hear; of thy appearance in those fantastical trousers In London. I am clear such eccentricities of dress would only make thee laughed at by the world, whilst thy sincere friends would be deeply hurt." Another historian, speaking of the time when Mr. Jefferson first put on trousers, wrote: "A gentleman in trousers and short hair! But what better could be thought or expected of a Democrat." The diary of Ann Whitall, Red Bank, N. J., in 1760, has the following: "Oh, will there ever be a Nehemiah
raised at our meeting to mourn and grieve! Oh, the fashions and running into them! The young men wearing thplr hats rpt tin hphind: the cirls
In Pennsylvania have their necks set off with a black ribbon; a sorrowful)
! sight! . . . This i3 the day that
Josiah Albert's son, all the son ne has, and his hat is clo3e up behind." Further in her diary she wrote: "Oh, the calico! . . .1 think tobacco, tea and calico may all be set down, one as bad as the other."
KING OF SWEDEN HURT IN AUTOMOBILE WRECK GRANVILLE, France, April 27. King Gustava of Sweden was painfully injured yesterday when the automobile in which he was proceeding from Nice to Geneva was struck by a machine owned by a prominent Geneva banker. The king's chamberlain was thrown from the car and gravely injured. The king suffered contusions of the left side.
CITY OF GREENVILLE TO EXTEND AVENUE
GREENVILLE. Ohio, April 27. The
City of Greenville has filed proceed
ings in probate court to appropriate property of Hanson Harmon, Catherine Harmon, John Lantr, Chelsle Bailey, William Bier on South Gray avenue, Tina Bier and Mary Bier for the extension of South Gray avenue. The last will and testament of Mary Bascom has been riled and admitted to probate and record in Judge Younker's court. The will provides that uzana Feltz. a daughter, is to receive one-half of her estate, real mixed, or personal, life insurance, household goods, etc., and the other half is to go to Lona Bascom, a daughter, to be held in trust, and Suzanna Foltz is named as trustee.
After Ten Years By MARION RUBINCAM
DAY DREAMS Chapter 39 It was the same complaint that Patty had heard before from her sister. They sat for a long time over the table, while Millie talked herself into a less nervous mood. Possibly nine women out of ten go through, in greater or less degree, the tragedy Millie herself was experiencing. The marriage service 'Says for betrer Or for worse, but no one ever yet stood before the altar and expected the "worse," and few have been good sports enough to accept It if it came. Which is all natural and . human enough. As for Millie she had been vaguely restless before. But, as she had evrything she could want, and was the
onvy of her friends, she thought if he thougth about it at all that on the whole she must be happy. When Patty came she realized two things first, that her youth was go-
eft be 30. A lifetime seemed to exist be-
iwi'fa ner age n-iiu uei usu o. rau was ho gloriously young 20! Thn she realized what a narrow, shut-in life she had been living. There were few people who came to Wissakeagan, who were accepted by her set. Th newcomers were workmen, usually. Fatty's manner, her voice, and whatever it was that college and a little trav
el gave her, set her apart from most
of Millie's friends. The solution seemed to be to get away and see a little of the world for herself. It was to improve herself; not to leave Humphrey. Then, .there was the arrival of a lot of young men from another world, and the odd, desperate fondness she began to feel for one of them. She was not unfaithful to Humphrey, even in her thoughts, and yet she was attracted to another man. But the other man was simply everything desirable to her, all she had hoped and wanted and never expected from Humphrey. She did want to see Paul again, she did want him to like her, she had been silly at times in talking to him but that was all.
DO NT DISREGARD A COLD Foley's Honey and Tar will check a cold If taken In time, and will also .stop a cough of long standing. It promptly srtves relief, soothes and heals. Mrs. Geneva Robinson. 88 N. Swan St., Albany. N. Y., writes: "Foley's Honey and Tar Is the best couRh medicine I ever used. Two bottles broke a most . stubborn lingering cough." Tt loosens phlegm and mucus, cases hoarseness, stops tickling throat, helps flu" and grip coughs. A. G. Luken Drug Co., r.?6-S27 Main. Advertisemnt. They bring quick results.
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Full-sized Aeolian-Vocalion, slightly (SZHH Kf used; now tP OvJ
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