Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 128, 30 May 1922 — Page 5
K1UHM0ND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, 1ND., TUESDAY, MAY 30, 1922.
FACE i ivii
AIsDitq on Jgave
INEZ
HtounwM Huevum nun
WHO'S WHO AD WHAT'S HAPPEXED ,- Sally Brabant, a society butterfly. ' has been Riven a year's leave of absence by her husband. Richard Brabant, who hopes that she will learn something of life. She sees much of Keith Gilbert, who has always been labeled "Dangerous," and is horrified to learn that, despite his position in society, he is a bootlegger. Her husband goes west, and she finds herself without money or a home. Attempting to earn her living, she secures a position as chaperone to Claire Finch, who has more money
than manners. They go to a summer i
resort where Claire falls in love witti Rex Mallory, who. in turn loses his heart to a little cabaret dancer. Rose Hewitt, whom Sally befriends. Claire elopes with an adventurer, and Sally returns to New York. Sally goes to the studio of an artist. Lee Craig, and hears Barbara Lane, an old friend, is accepting the attentions of a financier, Graham Browne, despite the fact that she is married.
farm, -where Babs and Andy could have the quiet, contented life for which they longed. But were their desires the samp now? She glanced up
her sister and Paul Darlington. Paul has a great deal of money, but Patty's earnestness and her faithfulness to her work make him find a job too. His mother disapproves; she wants him to marry a certain wealthy girl!
CHAPTER
LXXIV BARBARA'S
FOLLY Sally glanced around the studio, trying to imagine it as a setting for Barbara Lane. It was a long, beautfully shaped room, cleverly lighted so that the lights were all below the level of the
face. Sally noted
the way in which
drop lights were placed beside the chairs and window seats, and remembered something that Lee Craig had once said
to her.
Chapter 67 As Patty looked back over her friendship with Paul, it seemed to her that most of her meetings with him had been clandestine drives in his motor through a world made safe and private by the winter twilight. After overhearing Mrs. Darlington,
I Patty made up her mind that this
friendship had to cease. It might be i cutting out her own heart in fact, it would be quite ae painful but she dc- ! cided there was more than herself to j think of. I Patty was the type that, having deI cided upon a thing, wanted to carry
out the decision as soon as possible. Besides, if one has- decided to cut out one's heart metaphorically, the prospect of doing it is so painful that it is a mercy to have it over as soon as possible. In a way, it is like siting in a dentist's waiting room, knowing that in 10 or 15 minutes one will be sitting in a chair while the dentist holds up a pair of forceps to extract a tooth. The waiting is almost as painful as the extracting, and the
ing up at Paul. He tucked the robe' around her and they started off. In most cases they simply circled tho ' Park or ran up and down the Drive until it was time for Patty to go home. "Gee, but it's good to see youj again!" Paul raid with slangy enthu-i siasm. "You know, Patty, it's almost j
wortn 6taying away from you iour days to be this glad to see you." Patty laughed a. little. It wa3 so wonderful to be with him again! Sha
forgot her decision for a moment, and gave herself up to the sheer pleasure j of being with him and listening to
him. She would tell him on the way home. Meantime, this was their last drive why not enjoy It, most of it, as much as possible? "Wnat have you been doing? How is the work?"" She asked. "The work? Oh, I've got a new position. I've so many things to tell you." The car swerved into Fifth Avenue, and ran smoothly up its shining asphalt. New York at 9 had settled to its evening and was indoors either at home or in theatres and restaurants. It would be two hours before the scurry of cars and the homegoing subway crowds would make things alive once more. "First of all, Tuesday, mother decided, that if I had to work. I might
are family friends. We have runners at our place who have worked there SO years and they are still bank running.' But Patty was sure that Influence had nothing to do with it. She glanced at Paul as he guided the car easily over the streets at a little more than allowable speed. Paul could do anything, she thought. He held out his hand to success, laughing in his easy,
infectious way and that temperamental damsel came directly to him. Men who held inferior positions for 30 years did so because they deserved nothing better, Patty decided. They paused at a crossing for some traffic to go by. Paul slid his hand under the rug and took hers. Tomorrow Talk.
RECEPTION FOR CAVALRY HUNTINGTON. May 30. The city of Huntington has made arrangements for a big reception for a troop of United States cavalry which is scheduled to arrive. hre Saturday, June and remain over Sunday, camping in Memorial Park.
The fever for gambling Is raging throughout Germany.
sooner it begins, the less, painful the!':;' "' ur".e "" .v,i0 K.ioc t o r, ,oi,.Hit'emans job. So she began talking
"I've done all J could to bring him back, and failed," tee told her. as Andy entered the room, watching him as he greeted Lee Craig and acknowledged her introductions to the others. He did not hurry eagerly to Babs as he would have only a few months ago. Could it be possible that Graham Browne with his millions had come between them? ; She decided that if Barbara would
When a woman I let her, she would make them a brief
begins to grow old, i visit at Wee-acre, and learn if her she should see to it I suspicions were true. It was unbear-
whole business is. So Patty waited
impatiently for the time when she should see Paul next, having made up her mind that that time would be the last. She did not see him every night now. Paul had certain social obligations. And he had a mother. In the days before he decided to find
himself a job, time hung heavy on his; hands. When his mother wanted him!
to a lot of people we know, with the
result that Keen. Squier and company have made a place for me in their offices." "What are you?" Patty asked with interest. "Oh, at present a bank runner at the munificent salary of $15 a week.
j I carry bonds and stocks back and
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38
to attend certain entertainments, i
was always easy to do so. The pretty Miss MacKeen and two or three dozen other girls that he knew, saw quite a bit. of him. But now he was at work eight
nours, wnicn meant he was awav
' Inn Klumph
that she has the lights in her home able to think that Babs and Andy, of
placed so that they are thrown up on, all people could bo even slightly es-! from ' home from g 0.clock until 6.
uiiugeu. uau.-s me aear, mue, oia-
fashioned wife Tomorrow Deep Waters
her face, not down on it; then the
bad wrinkles are obliterated ; any clever photographer can tell you that." ; And now here was Lee arranging her lights in this fashion. Sally asked her about it. i ' I've gone in for portrait painting,
seriously now, and the lights are fori
ray patrons," with a little sign. I oh, come over and look at these miniatures and I'll tell you about it." And tinder cover of the pretended examination of them, she went on. " know how things used to be with Graham Browne and me, Sally; he was always here, always at my beck and call. I didn't think much of it; as I told you, my thoughts always went back to the man to whom I had been so unhappily married, and I felt that when I was successful and could hold his interest. I'd go back to him. "Well, I went back, not long ago, and found that I'd gone beyond him. He no longer interested me. And I
found, too. that I
Graham Browne! "So back I came to New York, blissfully happy. And here was Graham shadowing this dowdy little woman whose chief talent lay in cake baking, apparently! I was sick with humiliation and disgust. I did everything I could to bring him back, and failed. So I've settled down to work
forever and ever, amen!" Sally stared at her, as she had stared the afternoon when Lee told her of her unhappy marriage. It seemed curious ' that the brilli:it. attractive young i woman should see love slip through t her hands always. She was much ad-j mired, much envied; her talent was i
recognized everywhere. Sally thought her very beautiful, with her vivid, curly red hair and her slim figure in its clinging frock of midnight blue; she wondered how it happened that
Graham Browne could prefer little
J ... i j t .
Babs, witn ner aoway aresses ami aer. lack of guile. Yet when he and Barbara arrived ; she no longer wondered. For Barbara i had about her the womanliness that ' could not fail to hold a man of Browne's typ. She was sweet, demure, unostentatiously beautiful. And though she was less than 25, the motherliness that characterized her ,
love for her husband was expressed in her face. Barbara was delighted to see Sally. Sallv had written her when she went
to the store with Claire Finch, saying that she was to be out of town for a lime. And when Patricia Loring's husband was killed, she had tried to reach Barbara at Tarrytown, and failed. . "Where is Pats? What is she doins?" demanded Barbara, eagerl "Andy and I have been on a mot6 trip with Graham Mr. Browne and I pot homf only a few days ago and heard of Gibb's death then. Has Pals changed greatly?" I "Yes, a good deal, but I don't believe the chance will be lasting." Sally replied. "She adored Gibbs, and was willing to give up anything or do anything tor his sake. But now Miat he's gone and he is back at home in the same old environment. I think she'll be the fame Pats." Sally longed to ask her about her friendship with Graham Browne but as he was always at Barbara's side there was little opportunity. There was na reed to wonder about his feelings ihev were too apparent. I m "How's Andy?" asked Sally. "Andy's doing wonderfully," Bar-. bara answered, but despite the enthusiasm in her voice Sally noticed a certain wistfulness in that reply that set i her wondering more than ever. This was not the whole hearted enthusiasm ' cf other days. "Mr. Browne backed him in develop-1 ing that invention he'd been working on so long," Barbara went on. "And j it's a hu;e success. We're really going to be able to have some of the; thines we've always wanted." j Sally knew what "the things we've always wanted" had formerly meant the most important item had been aj t,i:llitttlilllinii!iiriiiit(iiMlititiilHitlillltiillllMliliiltilltilllitmilllMlllilimilllltlll ; I ALWAYS FRESH jj Bread and Pastry
Stop in on your way home. 1 NEW SYSTEM BAKERY 1 913 Main
After Ten Years By MARION RUBINCAM
THE UNEXPECTED Synopsis of Preceeding Chapters After ten years of married life, Millicent Buchanan realizes she is unhappy without knowing why. She has money and social position in Wissakeagan and everything she wants
To pacify his mother, who was violently opposed to "this nonsense." he had to spend many of his evenings with her. So there was an arrangement he-
j tween Paul and Patty that when he i could, he -would call at the business i school for her. He would be at the
door with the car. If the car wasnot there, she was not to wait that evening he could not make it. She did not see him for four nights after the decision that she must never see him again. Then, as she hurried down the stairs from tho night school, she saw the long green car standing patiently at the curb. Her heart gave a leap within her. She ran down and through the door,
t! forth from one office to ano'-her. That
i io iiiaKB me laminar wna me streets down there, and the names and members of firms. In two weeks I go inside to do office work. Then I begin to sell bonds and 'little by little
i they will push me along."
He laughed a little. r "Of course it is influence. Mother will keep at them and most of them
DON'T FORGET! Phone 1236 when you need Plumbing, Heating and Lighting. Our knowledge of your needs and our experienced workmen enable us to serve you right. WM. MEERHOFF 9 S. 9th
She isn't in lnvf with Hnmnhrev hut
after ten years she did not expect to 1 and stood with a shinmg smile look be. Few married people were, she!
thought. Her sister Patty has been at college and traveling. When Humphrey loses
was in love witn tiis money, and when her constant
fretting and nagging make him leave home, she willingly sells her house in Wissakeagan, and goes to New York with her mother and Patty Patty has been offered a position there. But the big city is lonely for her, and she is too indolent to want to work. She watches a friendship grow between
em
PHOTOS
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DOLLAR DAY SHOES 1 lot Ladles' and Children's white canvas lace Shoes and pumps, not all sizes; choice Wednesday . SX.OO 1 lot Ladies' Patent Leather high heel Shoes, $5.00 values, all sizes; Wednesday onIy si.oo 1 lot Ladies' brown, black and grey kid lace Oxfords and Pumps, sizes 4 to S1; Wednesday only S1.00 Ladies' white canvas strap Slippers 'and lace Oxfords, 5 styles, Wednesday SI. 9 Ladies' or Girls' patent Grecian strap Slippers, low rubber heel, for Wednesday ?nly : -S3.19 Low prices on Barefoots and play Oxfords. Boys' black Tennis Slippers, sizes 11 to 6; Wednesday only S3?
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One lot of plain white and figured Voile Dresses, sizes 16 to 44, values to $8.00; (T- f( Dollar Day 2)1.1)1
Middies in Lonsdale Jeans in all white or color
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Ladies' Gingham House Dresses in fancy checks
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$1.00
checks 98c
Children's Gingham Dresses in plain colors and fancy checks and stripes, $1.50 values, qq sizes 7 to 14 years; Dollar Day tOC
i.aaies wnue vone waists in ail size
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.': 89c
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