Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 122, 23 May 1922 — Page 5
TIIE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND., TUESDAY, MAY 23, 1922.
PAGE riVE
71 IsDlii on Jgave
IlhulniM ky MASBUSan
WHO'S WHO AD WHAT'S HAPPENED Sally Brabant, a society butterfly, has been given a years' leave of absence by her husband, Richmond Brabant, who hopes that she will learn something of life. She has thl-lllfner fllptatfnn with
Keith Gilbert, who has always benit08Sed
labeled "Dangerous." and Is horrmea to learn that, despite his position in
society, he Is a bootlegger. One of his men shoots a revenue officer, and Gilbert is held for murder. He escapes, taking Sally with him, but she Is rescued by Neal Calhoun, who gives her some good advice. She finds herself without funds and, now knowing where her husband Is. assumes the name of "Mrs. Pemberton.' 'and secures a position as chaperone to Claire Finch, who has more money than manners. They go to summer resort, where Claire falls in love with Rex Mallory, the son of a wealthy automobile manufacturer,' who prefers Sally. Sally goes to dinner at a road'.touse with Claire and Mallory and In the dressing rooms finds a girl picking her pockets. The girl is the sister of the employee of Keith Gilbert who was arrested for shooting a revenue officer and has resorted to desperate means to get money for a new trial for him. Sally promise sto help her. Sally goes to New Tork to consult Calhoun in the girl's behalf. She has luncheon with an old friend, Patricia Loring. a modern flapper who has recently eloped, and who is summoned home by a strange telephone call. Patricia's husband had been hurt in an accident: seeing them together, Sally realies the depth of the girl's devotion, and the change that love has nide in her. Sallv returns to the hotel to find that during her absence Claire has been flirting with
Ned Ralston, a young man or ooudi
center of attention, was disposed to be somewhat more agreeable, and Sally sat down to breakfast feeling rather happy. Whatever happened, it couldn't be as bad as last night had been! She glanced through her mail, and
it aside. Now that Patricia
ful character whose acquaintance she made without an introduction. With Mallory Sally goes to the roadhouse to see the little dancer once more and promise her aid. Mallory is fascinated by the girl. During Sally's absence, Claire disappears with Ned and Ralston, and Sally and Rex follow them to the Blue Kitten Inn. CHAPTER LXVII AN IMPERATIVE SUMMONS All the way back to the hotel Sally pondered over this new turn of events. Dick had returned, then he might be only a few miles away at that very moment. Oh, where was he? Had he recognized her? Had he been looking for her? The questions raced through
her mind, and she could answer none of them.
It seemed to her
aWj hatiy par.brd her l"0 ' hurried off to Pats.
was the only one of her friends who
know where she was, she received nothing interesting, except when Pats'
letters came. Claire was beginning to thaw under the warmth of her friendly overtures, when one of the hotel attendants came to their table with a telegram. "For Mrs. Pemberton," he said, and Sally tipped him hastily and tore open the envelope. Dick couldn't know that she was there, of course; he didn't even know her assumed name, she reminded herself. And yet sh.e dared to hope that this message came from him. She read it twice before her stunned mind would accept its meaning; then she dropped it on the table, staring straight before her. "Gibbs dying can you come to me,"
that she had never Mt read, and was signed, "Pats." cared so much forj "What is it?" inquired Claire, mildher husband be-y interested. fore. She wonder- "It's, a message" Sally stopped ed how many mar- suddenly. Her first- impulse was to
ried women there nurry to rais as iasi as sne couia go, were the world' DUt even as she rose from the table, over, who found I sne hesitated. She had given her themselves bored "word that she would stay with Claire,
wouia cnaperone ner. it sneien now,
prejudice her against Ned if you knew we'd already been married. But he wired her last night, in my name, so I can tell you now. And she'll be here soon, so don't feel any further responsibility." To Sally, whose mind was In a jumble of confused thoughts, it sounded reasonable enough. Her first feeling was one of relief; she would be free now from this odious task of chaperoning Claire, free from the fresh humiliations that the girl heaped upon her each day. It did not occur to her to corroborate Claire's story, or to
take precautions to prevent disaster
if it were not true. She scribbled a note for Rex Mallory, telling him what Claire had told her, and giving Pats telephone address in town; then, hastily packing her overnight bag, and bidding Claire goodbye until the next day, she hurried off to the train. "I'll get in touch with you this afternoon if I don't return," she told the
girl. "I don't quite Bee but I suppose that you arranged this as you
inougnt best. And this wire from
your mother " "Oh, Mama is delighted," Claire as
sured her. "And of course I know that you meant to do what was best, but you just didn't appreciate Ned."
bally reflected that she certainly did not, if Claire's standards were
the right ones. Claire gave her two weeks' salary. exDlaininz as she did
so that she didn't suppose she really had to do that, under the terms of their contract, but of course she wanted to be generous. Sally took the money, then laid it down on the dressing table as if it had burnt her. "Oh; I couldn't!" she exclaimed.
That is I mean, I'd rather you'd keep it and buy a wedding present from me with it."
On the way into town she wondered if she had been foolish, and decided that she had not. "I'm a failure as a business woman, I can't earn my living at all," she told herself, dejectedly. "Every girl in Dick's office every girl in any office, or behind any school teacher's desk, or anywhere that there's work to be done, is more successful than I am. I don't earn my way at all. But I'm glad I didn't take Claire's money. And now she and I are through, and we'll never see each other again!" she concluded, little suspecting how soon and under what circumstances they would face each other. Tomorrow The Shadow of Death.
York, and goes, her family going with present worry, she found this care feeling to anything less glorious than
a-'ci. m iue cii)1, one uibcu i nui asom, jfgg attitude a
and is more in love than ever. Miine, restless and unhappy in town because she knows no one, is Jealous of Patty's good times, and Paul's attentions.
Inea Klnmph
with marriage, as she had been, and longed for a bit of freedom. She vVndered if they felt as she had only a few months before, that they wished they could go out with other men than their husbands, dispense with responsibility, escape from the sheltered homes where they dwelt and face life without the restrictions laid down by the men whose names they bore. She wished that she could go to them and say, "Oh, don't long for something that you will hate if you get it. Be glad that you are sheltered, that you have a man who loved you to stand between you and the world! Perfect bondage is a blessed thing. Make the most of the love that is yoursr and rejoice because some man cares enough for you to Want to protect you." Now, with so many things threatening her, she did not know what to do. She qould not depend on Claire, she
realized; the girl would sup away again at the first opportunity. They could not possibly leave for Rex Mallory's until late the next day. Ralston could reach the girl before then. And she knew that now Rex did not want to go; that his meeting with the little dancer. Rose Hewitt, had given him the best of reasons for wanting to stay right there. Nor did she want to go, with Dick back in that part of the country. It would be torture to leave now, knowing that she might have encountered
him if she had stayed. Never in the days of their engagement had she
known such eagerness a3 this; never before had the wanted so much to see him, if only for a few moments. "I had the treasures of the world in my hands," she told herself, unhappily. "And I threw them all away." Claire maintained silence, except when directly addressed, and then was as insolent as possible. Sally dread
ed being alone with her that night. I
But when they went to their rooms, Claire slammed the door of hers behind her, and Sally breathed a, sigh of thankfulness. She rose in the morning with hope In her heart. If she could just get through that day, could just get started with Claire and Rex Mallory for his mother's country place, her troubles would be partly over at least. Claire, obviously pleased at being the
After Ten Years By MARION RUBINCAM
even for a few hours, she knew all too well what the outcome would be.
Claire would promptly communicate with Ralston, and they would be married at once. She herself would not be living up to her contract with the girl's mother. Yet there was little Pats, one of her dearest friends, wanting her. There were others on whom Pats could call, of course, but that mattered little to Sally. Pats had sent for her, and now she could not go. She had supposed that it was easy to see what was the right thing to do, yet now, no matter which way she decided, it seemed wrong. If only she could depend on Claire! Or rather, if only she could depend on her not doing what she probably would do. "A friend of mine wants me to come to her," she told the girl, when Claire
repeated her question. "Her husband is dying and she needs me." ,kOh, of course you'll go!" There was no mistaking the eagerness with which Claire spoke. Sally shook her head. "I can't," she replied. "I'm here to chaperone you, and of course, after last night I don't feel that I ought to go and leave you." "You mean that you're afraid I'll elope with Ned Ralston, if you go; is that it?" Claire laughed softly, unpleasantly. "What would you say if I told you that I'm already married to him?" "Oh, you couldn't be you weren't
last night!" exclaimed Sally, in amazement. "Why, you were on your way to the minister's when we met you. He said that " "Oh, I know that he said the minister was waiting," agreed Claire. "We were going to keep our marriage a
secret till I could wire Mama. I thought you'd slip in ahead of me and DID HIM MOIIE GOOD Many men and women suffer from backache, rheumatic pains, stiff, Joints, sore muscles and other results of kidney trouble because they neglected the first warning symptoms. Foley Kidney Pills aid the kidneys to throw out poisonous waste matter that causes pain and misery. Stephen Lewis, Eldridge. Ky.. writes: "Foley Kidney Pills did me more good than all the other medicine i ever took. I had kidney trouble ten years. I don't have any pain like 1 had before I took them." A. G. Lukon Drug Co., 626-628 Main St Advertisement.
Synopsis of Preceding Chapters. After Millicent Buchanan has been married ten years she finds herself
I very unhappy without knowing why.
Her husband, Humphrey, is good to her, but she finds suddenly that she is actually bored with him. She has a big social position in the tiny town of Wissakeagan. but she finds the town people uninteresting. Then her sister Patty comes home from a year of travel. Mrs. Grainger-Munn, with whom she has been traveling, stops for a visit and Paul Darlington from New York stops off at the town. Patty meets him and falls in love with him and Millicent discovers that Paul is (he sort of man that interests her and not Humphrey.
After these two visitors hnv loft
Humphrey, who has been speculating in timber, loses all his money. Milli-j cent now has to do her own r,rn,K.
work and cannot buy prettv clothes. She is so restless and miserable that I
ue quarreis again and again with Humphrey. One night he disappears, sending back word that he i3 working in a lumber camp where Millie can come when he makes enough monev. Patty is offered a position in New
MIXED EMOTIONS Chapter 61. When Patty ran up the stairs after Paul's sudden kiss, she was so bewildered, and hurt, and glad, too, that her head was a whirl of new thoughts. She had. only one clear Idea that she had to be composed and calm when she went into her own apartment. So she stood on the landing, outside her door, leaning against its ugly green painted wall, and pressed both hands against her cheeks, in a hopeless effert to press back the blood that was pulsing through her skin. JMrs. Parke, looked at her as she came in. "You shouldn't run up those stairs," she reproved. "Your face is scarlet." Patty was glad to let this explanation pas. "Millie's gone to a show with some girl she picked up somewhere vou stayed a long time with , Mrs. Munn."
"Not very long "Patty caught herrelf, she had almost given herself away again. But Mrs. Pa ike was continuing to talk: "It's pretty lonely for me here alone all evening. She might ask me over now and then."
The girl wondered how she could make friends for her mother. There was no common interest between the women she worked with and Mrs. Parke; they did not think alike, they
had few tastes that were the same; Mrs. Parke would have disliked them if she had known them. "You stay indoors all day if you would go out and see the city it rnnll Ka mA Intarftfltinr'"
But for once she was not interested in her mother's problem she had a new one of her own.or a new development of , an old one. - She took the rug from the living room couch and turned down its covers Patty never taw a couch for years after this winter in New York, without wondering if it was not a concealed bed. It seemed to her the height of extravagance to own a couch that didn't do double duty. Mrs. Park went to her own tiny bedroom, Millie came in from the theatre with a tale of a new ice cream place where the sundaes were "just erand." and after a time the girl was
I alone in the friendly dark and quiet
to think about herself. When Patty had a new problem, she talked it over with herself. "You used to think it would be wonderful just to live in the same city with him," she argued with herself. "And here you are with a position, a salary, a nice home, 'a family" (she probably was a little doubtful as to
whether this was an unmixed blessing) "pleasant people to work with, Mrs. Munn," (she was genuinely gratelul here) "and you can see Paul often. And he does like you " She began thinking aver things he had said. He was so beautifully irresponsible! From her own seriousness, and her
most attractive one.
When Paul laughed it was always because he had just heard the funniest story yet, or because he had never been so amused before. ; When he played a game of tennis, he had never played so hard before, nor wanted so much to win. Life was made up of present moments, with a half remembered past and a pleasantly vague future. Paul's definite future was bound by the fur
thest entry in his engagement book a book kept in order by the maid, the footman and his mother rarely by Paul himself. VHzy should his kiss hurt? She tried to remember it, but she could not because it had happened so suddenly she had sprung back from him almost before she realized he had kissed her. She remembered well enough that night by the tennis courts when Paul was torn between the need of getting to his hotel and pack, and the desire to be with this likeable girl. "I never expected anything. I BimD
ly fell in love and knew it was hopeless." Patty told herself. "But I would rather be hopelessly in love with a man like Paul than in love with a man like Basil." She was so much ip love she even felt it would be wrong to give such a
this one man!
"I never expected to see him, and I do see him often' she went on, and in the dark she said over and over, "I love you, I do !ove you" because it made her happy to say it .Then she wondered why it hurt her because he kissed her.
"It was so casual " she told herself. "If he had cared for me, even a little,
he would have been different." phe remembered her remark about the other girl, and still regretted it. "He's probably kisses her, too, just as casually as he kissed me," she went on thinking. And then, illogically, decided he must be in love with Miss MacKeen! "He isn't in love with me that was just a kiss, that wasn't love," she argued. "And if he were in love with me what then? It would be just as hopeless, only he would feel badly, and as it is, I'm the only one that feels
badly. And I'm not sorry I'm in love j with him." Her thoughts began to wander. "But he mustn't do it again," 1 she thought finally. "It makes it so much harder for me. But I can't bear ' not to see him." ' And eventually, being healthy and j young and tired, she fell sound asleep. Tomorrow A Change in Events.
Heart Problems
Dear Mrs. Thompson: I am engaged to a young man and, his mother ba.-s never called upon me.' Now I have had an invitation from her jnvitin3 me" to his home for dinner. Do you think I should decline the Invitation until she has called on me . RUTH I. Accept the invitation to dinner. Without a doubt your finace's mother has the right spirit toward you and does not realize you would prefer 43 have her call first. Do not look tor formalities. You will be happier, if you meet your husband's people with a heartful of love and cordiality! To look for slights would be "a very bad start in your new family relations."
Vest Pocket Kodak $6.50
Fits so snugly in your pocket you forget it until there's a picture ahead. Autographic and takes picture lx2ya. Brownies Priced $2.00 up Kodak Junior from $12.00 up With each camera purchased we include without cost a roll of films. Try Our Glosstone Finish QUIGLEY'S DRUG STORES Fourth and Main
Ladies' White Footwear
Sport model, of white Nile Cloth and trimmed with
white kid at
Also showing a variety of white styles in Oxfords and strap effects. Many good patterns for the little folks.
Electric Lamp at Reduction Prices House Wiring, Chandeliers and Supplies WM. H. MEERHOFF 9 South 9th St. -Phone 1236
PHOTOS
7ZZ MAIN ST RICHMOND. INQ
Note These Extra Specials in House Furnishings DARK GREEN WINDOW SHADES, 36 in. AQn wide, perfect quality; special xOv $9.00 HEAVY IMPORTED GRASS RUGS Far better than matting, in 9x12. Special fQ this week V eDt.iO $37.50 HEAVY AXMINSTER RUGS Good patterns, Smith and Eigelow makes CJOI OQ Special at a$.S4wO OUR $34.50 BEST SEAMLESS BRUSSELS RUGS Size 9x12. These are priced special d-! f AO at ipLU.VO $10.00 FELT MATTRESSES Full size, &rj QQ with good Art ticking; special I 0 $6.00 HEAVY PORCH RUGS Size TQ QQ 6x9 ; special pOot70 Richmond's Only Complete Department Store
11911 1908
wiir1 : 1909
m 1917 M 1921 1918 yj 1902 I 1931 2 , 1930
i
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New Q. R. S. Player Rolls for JUNE are Now on Sale The following partial list gives you an idea of the splendid assortment: ,
Babbling Brook (Waltz) Fall All and Forever (March) Hula Hula Rose (Hawaiian Waltz) Montana (Marimba Waltz) The Rosary You Gave Me (Ballad) No Use Crying (Fox Trot) Teasin' (Fox Trot) Come Back to Erin The Lost Chord
Take home a new Player Roll and give your Player a newlease on life. You will enjoy it more if you do. The Starr Piano Go. 931-933 Main Street
i i
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white kid- Ql AA
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-4r Beckman & J J . ; Kreimeier j II 708 Main St. i
r ' .1 jnnMiiinHiiMiiiMMnMMH
wit 5 fO I . t . W , - - .L..'Krr I I
T3 I
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Parcel Post IP,
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25 Trade Marks and
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A SMASHING offer! A chance to get elfrht bg pieces of pure Aluminum cheaper than you thought yon would ever be able to secure an Aluminum Set any place. Look at these pieces a 5-Quart Beautifully Paneled TeaKeattle, a 6-Cup Beautifully Paneled Coffee Percolator, Sauce Pans theyery thing
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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
The Complete Set Consists of A beautifully paneled 5-Qaart Tea Kettle and a S Cup Paneled Coffee Percolator two exceptionally finiihed piece, with the tpouta welded and not aeamed. Theae piece are never found in cheap Aluminum ware offers. In addition there are three Sauce Pans (1 quart, iH quart and 1 quart). Then there ii a Strainer Funnel with Qe diatinct niei. It can be used aa (1) a one-pint Dipper, () Fruit Funnel, (S) Fruit Funnel with Strainer, (4) Spout Funnel, (5) Spout Funnel with Strainer. Also a good lixed Strainer Ladle, a real kitchen necenity. THE GLOBE SOAP COMPANY, CINCINNATI, 0.
15 Trade Marks and Cash for the 5 Quart Tea Kettle Only If you wish to itart out
by petting only the Tea Kettle, send $1 .45 in caih and IS Trade Mark, 5 ot
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15 Trade Marks and 95c Cash
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fnat-Muis
nEAI.EHS IX KK HM(IM), IXI. pnn?! "' P- AIU.ru & Son, 141.1 X. i: St. rntcrorsania IIik-ihI, 70l X. llllh St. 25 A. V. Itlifkneilel, 7i J. V St. Trade.Mj.rlc. Ms" KMnkor. KOI S. IMh St. , ;,' I rape-warm ieo. Baker, MM X. H St.
: lJ"-si . Hrlnkrr. 700 S. 71 h t,
12th St.
FREE for A
25 A 11 a
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I " " -'V JM ""M VT i t n.-- mk "rlnker. 7M S. 71 b t. I 1 t H jr-r Da Kedrrioo. 1K X.
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For Boys and Girls f: i
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C . H. Suilhoff V Son. 1S3 K- 9 vnr
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