Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 111, 10 May 1922 — Page 5
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND., WEDNESDAY, MAY 10, 1922.
PAGE riVE
on J&ave k , , JS INEZ KLUMPH 0"
WHO'S WH4 ,-WD WHAT'S
HArEXED SIly Brabant, 1 i society butterfly, has ben given Drear's leave of absence by her hush fd. Richard Brabanft who hopes that she win learn Boniethi-by of life. She has a thrilling flirtattaH with Keith Gilbert, wi to has always been labeled "Dan serous T and Is horrified to learn that, despite) Sils position In society, he is a bott'fegger. One of his men shoots a reve4 ie officer, and Gilbert is held for mturder. He escapes, taking- Sally with 6 ifcm. but she is rescued by Neal Calhoun, wl gives her some rood advice. She. fii jds herself without unds, and. not know ilng where her husband Is. assumes tlie name of "Mrs. Pemberton," and obt llns a position as chaperone to Claire Finch, whothas more money than manners. They fro to a summer resort, where Claire 1 Villa in love with Rex ilallory, the so n of a prominent automobile manufacturer, who prefers Sally. Sally troes to dinnei at a roadhouse with Claire and Mall, iry, and In the dressing room finds a girl picking her pockets.
CHAPTER L V 1 1 A T ANGLED WEB For a moment Sail:' was too surprised to speak. At th e sound of her cry the girl had whlrlc id around, and now stood facing her di iflnatly.
"What do you mean, going through my pockets?" Sally demanded when Bhe could control her voice. "Were you looking for eometh lag to steal?" "I was," the girl retorted, holding up Sally's little gold mrsh bag, and fingering Its clasp of fiapphires and diamonds. "And I found s it." "But you can't take thatt, It's mine." Sally caught her wrist in a tight grasp. "You can't steal f torn me." "Oh, I can't, Mrs. R Ichard Brabant!" The girl's voice ras insolent. "That gets you, doesnt' it? You can come down here and try 1 to deceive
people, so they won't tttix you up with trie trouble over Ke 1th Gilbert. Well, I'n i onto you. You do n't know me, but J used to bo one of I the elevator girls ifn that big apartment house where he. lived, and
about it. He didn't mean to go wrong, only somehow there wasnt' any work for him but you don't know anything aJout things like that:" And her glance swept over Sally's smart frock.
Heart Problems
1 simplicity and beauty and hominess of j is to .have tact. You'll overhear a lot
the place.
I women you know " , I
ii Hpar 1 10 nave eyes ana see not, ears ana
Dear Mrs. Thompson:
YoQ lilrA 4)io nil-tic T-c
I am a young ' I can't tell you hw glad I am to have 1 tomorrow
man ftiehteen vpars old. I have been i"e' ior.. vo. "" . . . ' Sh e W th Jro. and nrranir-
., aeaa too. xes, a on t loon protesting, i going with a girl of fifteen. She is of have rve et myi,elf sit here. and light complexion and had bobbed hair, think--oh, not necessarily gloomy I think more of her than of any of the , thoughts, for Mary's life was so beau- . , . , . . , r ji tiful that her deathmust be beautiful rest of my girl friends. Because r do tQQ . . not dance anrt haven't a. r.ar she will.
not give me steadv dates. She gives, lattys nana went out, ana tney sat hasn't 'she and I suppose she'll find other fellows dates because they dance ; holding to each other for an instant, something to do?" ' and have cars. j Then . "O yes," Patty answered. , j She is a very nice girl and I would ( "I've let myself get out of touch gut that was a new problem, i I'rtvi JV1?1" fltendshlp- P'ease I with young people. I think that must. ghe fcnew ghe cou,d j a' advise me what to do. be it. 1, . . .. . i
HEART-BR4KEN. "But all your friends have daugh-Piace mucn cneaper tnan tne lime
She gave her the adCress, and arrang
ed to be there to show her what was expected. j "Of course, you can't do it, and pay for that apartment, which is $40, and buy clothes and food for three," -she
' said. . "But Millicent has money.
New Standard i ICE CREAM FREEZER V. A two-quart double-action Freezer, Hk;" cut. Freezes in 5 minutes. Serving' for twelve people; strongly made. J- Jt Q Special . . . t V-L iO-
ME1
r
If a girl drops you because you ters." apartment they had, without going!
haven't a car, she is not worth having t "Dear me yes. and granddaughters , either into a neighborhood so shabby as a friend. Unless you have scruples j being introduced into society, andth d b unhappy( or so far up. against dancing, I would advise you driving high powered cars a 1 over the would have to Join the to learn. Then you and the girl could country! You see, while Mary lived dai, mob h waJ t h
Aiiciiu uauws lugeiuei. ",i uau iicr cuuivauiuroun; auu "'trains in an nvprrrnwdpd Riihwav
pect to go with her exclusively. She j friends were always around the house Qf CQU th had Mmie.a mQn probably realizes that while she is so i Naturally, they've dropped off. I seebut whpn th i(J for thg trj young it would be foolish to settle; them when, I ff their mothers my j shippin th furniturei and other exdown to one young man. Try to, dear, Im too old for the younger gen-j pense3 at homp a lnt'nart bpen uspd
please her by studying her likes and;eration and too young for tne oiaer dislikes and acting accordingly. Be one! These girls' mothers tell me I'm sure to 4ake her places when yoh a Rardical that's because I made a
can affora to do so. It is not fair tor speecn at a laoor meeting last weeK.
laec Klnmph
many's h'.he time I've seen you come
In there. Oh, toot alone it'll admit that there- wa3 always a crowd along. But I knew who you were, fat enough, the first time I saw you at the hotel here. I was working there ajwa maid, and then I got my jrb here? I'm one of the South Seal Island rta ncers in the cabaret." "But I don't understand I! 'don't see why you steal from me," Sally protested. "What have I got to do i ith you?" "Plenty. Maybe you've fon gotten all about a certain little party CSat Keith Gilbert gave at his country, place up the Hudson maybe you doni t remember that the revenue officers came to arrest him, not just because I he was a bootlegger, but because there! 'd been a fight and one of the reventuj- officers had been killed." The girl's (voice was tense; her defiance had disappeared. "Well, they got the man who killed the officer, though Keith Gilbert got away, taking you with him. ' And the kid they got for that . shoo ting the loy who's been sent sent to prison he's my brother. , . "Oh, my dear!" Sally's voice was tender, sympathetic. The .girl had dropped into a chair that sta d beside the dressing table, her face buried in her folded arms, and Sally knelt be
side her, her arm around i he girl's Bhoulders. "Oh, please don't cry so let me help you. I didn't k now anything about this I read the i apers, of course, but I supposed that the man who was arrested got off Fleith told me that he would. He said 'St was all a matter of pull." "Sure for him it wa3, but not for my brother," sobbed the girl... "He's a j kid he's only 22, and this f was his ; first crooked work, honest. T3ut he'd i
been out of a job for over ai rear, and we didn't have a cent, exce, t what I earned $15 a week! And one of the artists who lived in that building wanted me to pose for him, but, I didn't want tt I knew what he was, all right, iack was afraid IVf give in, though, so he he got in ,with this gang, without my knowing anything
Bally knelt ietidc the 0irL. "Ye3 1 do more than you think," Sally retorted. "Oh, I'm sorry I didn't know about this. I thought that even though Keith Gilbert did get away, he'd see to it that everything was done for the men who worked for him. Of course, I don't mean that he could escape justice, but surely your brother had a lawyer " "Where'd ne get money to pay a lawyer?" demanded the girl bitterly. "That's what I'm trying to get together now. That's why I came in here and tried to steal your pocketbook after I saw you come in. I've got to get money somehow I've got to get things started, and try to get a new
trial for Jack, and a regular lawyer
and everything. They just hung this on him, those others did. The shooting was .all done in the dark; nobody could prove absolutely that Jack was the one who shot that man. But when tiey all got to testifying, and the others had such a lot to say and were so sure of themselves, why Jack somehow oh, he stammered, and was scared, and finally broke down when there seemed to be so much against him. All he could say was that he was firing in the air, too high to hit anybody. And I've got to get him out, I tell you I've got to get him out!" "We'll do it together!" Sally told her, decidedly. "I'll help you; I can do something, I know."
Sally went back to her table thought
a young man to call on a girl night after night; he should take her candy.
send her flowers and invite her to go to places of amusement occasionally.
After Ten Years By MARION RUBINCAM
tt .1 r i - ,
iuujr. uiiuei tuvn ui wanes i imiici . . . , , . A
and Mallory's brief replies, she had "' "W
feel a room lives unless the windows onen into the outdoors, or else a fire is going." "How dead most rooms are then!" Patty answered. Her eyes traveled around, looking with pleasure at the
Patty laughed.
"Is that to he my work going to labor meetings?" "No that brings us to the point, doesn't it? Of course' you know all about the work of the Civic Society?
; Well, we've a special committee to i work in this part of the city. We are ' trying to put in reforms of one sort j and another. ' I've hired a set of ofj fices in what was once a negligee shop
my dear, when you see their interNEW YORK jor "decorations! Cubism and FuturChapter 50 i jSm carried to the ultimate degree. Patty went around to Mrs. Munn'sjBut that's the point Your work will
house, although she felt the jealous ; be " disapproval of her mother follow" her J She went on, outlining the new du-: the entire distance. She felt at home ties, which seemed simple enough. !
the moment she crossed into the other Someone with intelligence and a nicej
house. She loved the low, wide hall- personality bad to be in the ornce way, and the tiny oval room by the from. 10 until 5:30, to answer the door where Mills, the butler, helped Phne' keel their records, and write Kn, nw -nn-tv. .o .rvof 1 letters.
T' u ; ! "You won't really need shorthand. Its like old times to see you again, .t. J
, T1. l V- l.U . . ailU WILLI LJI OA-LI I. O JUU 11 LTO OU1C IAJ j MI,fTst.Pa1r.ke' V0,15 ter; . . . typewrite fast enough-there'll be lit"Its like old times to be back ',e of that ny-ay. You must help! Mills," she answered. Mrs. Munn had us with publicity, and do the hundred j the rare ability of making friends ofjodd jobs that come up in any such or-j her servants. She was the despair ganization. My dear, the chief thing: and envv of all the women who knew ;
her. and who changed maid"', as one said, "every new moon." Mills had been with her 30 years. Mrs. Munn had made one room of her first floor which, after the manner of New York houses, was raised high above the street. At the far end Patty found her on a sofa before a fireplace, with a lamp on the sofa table at her elbow, and some magazines and novels scattered about within reach. "It isn't quite cold enough for a fire
yet," she said, afte" she had kissed
penses at home, a lot had been used
up. But she wasn't going to worry about it yet. Of course they would manage and Humphrey would send for Millie as soon as she was able. He' hadn't given them his address, so they could not write but the post office at home would send on any letters. She walked home along the quiet street, tired, a little worried, but still with that feeling of exhaustion. Tomorrow New Events.
The consumption of wines and
liquors has increased rapidly in Ger
many since the war.
WELDON'S (Formerly Reed Furniture Co.) For Porch Furniture
Patent Slippers for Children $1.50 to $3.00 NEFF & NUSBAUM
"PRECISION" Trade-Mark Reg. the Gruen Guild Mark of Highest Timekeeping Perfection - The mark "Precision" on a-Gruen Watch indicates the " highest timekeeping perfection obtainable. It is an ex- , elusive Gruen marking, devised by the guild more than twenty-five years ago as its pledge of fine workman ship in a watch movement. The watches pictured here are beautiful examples of the newest Gruen designs for men and women. Whether or not you are thinking of buying a watch now, we believe you will be interested in examining these and other new Gruen Watches that are creating such comment.
JENKINS & COMPANY 726 Main Street
an opportunity to plan what she would do. She must go to town at once,
must see if there was any way that she could raise money,, and find out if any of her friends could be of assistance. She thought of Neal Calhoun he was so resourceful, so competent.
He would know what to do. t . But was she never to he free of this web of her own weaving, this ensnaring tangle of circumstances that had i begun when Keith Gilbert asked her teasingly: "Are you going to let me make love to you?" and she, with the thought of a year's adventure ahead of her, did not refuse to listen to him.
Special attention given to the treatment of stomach, intestines and the nervous svstem. Electric light and
shower baths. E. P. WE1ST, M. D.
204 K. of P. Bldg., Phone 1728
Sr-?A-wa1 X
nv i
it?
Real Rouquefort Cheese Neufchatel Cheese Sap Sago Cheese Parmesan Cheese Pineapple Cheese Pimento Cheese
Fancy Brick Cheese Philadelphia Cream Cheese Real Swiss Cheese New York Cream Cheese Camembert Cheese Limburger Cheese
GROTHAiUS "QUALITY" FURNITURE
Outdoor Furniture The summ ;rs are all too short. Why not increase your enjoyment and pleasure this summer by investing a little money in suitable Porch or Lawn Furniture? Prices are way down to bedrock, and when you consider the results yon will get on your investment in comfort and satisfaction, the cost is secondary. Right now our stocks of outdoor furniture are particularly complete and many; special values are being featured.
Why are there more calls for Qargoyle Mobiloil than for any three other oils produced? YOU are no different from, other motorists in this one respect: Clever salesmanship or striking advertising may sell you a lubricating oil once but it doesn't make a permanent friend of you. What does? The lubricating value in the oil ! Nothing else. More of your fellow motorists are today specifically asking for Gargoyle' Mobiloil than for any three other oils combined. They ask for it day after day, month after month. Why? Economy? Yes! You will find that Gargoyle Mobiloil helps you to secure the- lowest possible repair bills- the greatest possible freedom from minor engine troubles the fullest possible mileage from gasoline and oil. Quality? Yes! Gargoyle Mobiloil "wears" better and lasts longer than 9 out of any 10 oils possibly can. Why? xThe next two paragraphs will tell you. Nine out of every ten other oils offered yoii are merely by-products incidental to the production of gasoline. Such "oils" are made from crude petroleum chosen for high gasoline yield. Gargoyle Mobiloil is produced by specialists in lubrication, who choose their crude oil for lubricating properties refining it to secure the best obtainable lubricating oil '
The next time you arc out driving, look for the Gargoyle Mobiloil sign. As you come in front of it stop. Ask the dealer for a 5 -gallon can of Gargoyle Mobiloil.
JTOR the transi mission and differential of your car use Gargoyle Mobiloil "C" or as specified in the Chart.
55 III .
- - . ou I I !
j5- ill "
Mobiloil Make the chart your guide
FERD grothau 614 Main Street Established 1855. Richmond, Indiana VACUUM OIL COM
