Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 131, 2 June 1922 — Page 5

PAGE FIVE

7f (sDi(q on Jggve

Jbij INEZ KLUMPH So

' lltuvralxt b MARGUUlTt NEJkLS

After Ten Years By MAKION RUBINCAM

f cept working girls I saw on the streets j you up to dislike, that she wouldn't r ners? They are all lacking in what cuss the gossip anymore than to saj

I or in cars, ana they were always so j ininn v issakeagan and us social at

i nomeiy I never thought much aoou. mosphere much better, that

them. I hate ugly people and ugly, paul stopped her with a kiss. And

it takes to make a lady.

DON'T WORRY

1 sailed for England, after all. Sally

WHO'S WHO A.D WHAT'S

Sally Brabant' a aocletv butterfly. I d been S0 ure that he had gone-

has bn Riven a year's leave of ab-isne was completely oewuoerea

sence by her husband, liiohard Brabant, who hopes that fhe will learn something of life. She sees much of Keith Gilbert, who has always been labeled "Dangerous." and is horrif ie i to learn that, despite hi3 position in society, he is a bootleer. Her husband goes west, and she finds hersel. without money or a home. Attempting to earn her living, she secures a position as chaperone to Claire Finch, who has more monethan manners. They ro to a summer resort where Claire fails in love with Ilex Mallory, who. in turn loses his heart to a little cabaret dancer. Hcse Hewitt, whom Sally befriends. Claire elopes with an adventurer, and Sally returns to New York. Sally sroes to the studio of an artist. I-ee Craigr. and hears Barbara Iane. an )ld friend. Is accepting the attentions of a financier, (Iraham Browne, despite the fact that she is married. Sallv accepts an invitation to go with Barbara and Browne to a dress rehearsal of a new opera at the Metropolitan, v

THE ETERNAL PASSION Chapter 70 v

There was one way of making Paul

-until I began Eo muc& in love that she could onlyiadvlse the innocent person to forgive!.' . -. - ,. ,Jtt.can"nagir;ghere' near hir" with her i iXSr i

'Odd v;a in': it our meet hi on the w"- sometnmg very Daaiy inaera

- 1 triat was to refuse it to him.

CHAPTER LXXVI I A SURPRISE FOR SALLR The lights flared up as the curtain dropped at the end of the act. Several women came bustling into the seats just behind Sally, and she heard voice ?ay, "Yes, I returned most unexpectedly yesterday. It's delightful to be home." Sally sat quite still. It couldn't be and yet surely it was she turned,

and found herselt facing mother-in-law. For a moment she hardly knew what to do She had supposed that -Madame Brabant was still abroad, and that Dick had sailed to join her; now her heart

thumped madly as

S ... mu mimmmt0

1 Vt-. If ..1 - . Un. nil

!my life. Anyway, I never thought Patty couId not puU away' Sne wa3j under such circumstances

much about anything

runmnir around with

et alnns- without von PatfV." 'Singing.

, j T ,. . .!.!,, Tomorrow Common Sense

1 rnn!" rami Pi ttf'e rnlro frnni tb,- !

In after .,.

Mfe Patty knew this, and perhaps, just, ' . . , . -ince in awhile h mad use of the Pauls serious mood changed in a

it did not come from her. To blame

! '.he other woman and sDend a lot ol

It would be impossible not to jtlme haggling over something unplea

I would !

ant and worthless would not brin

neighborhood.

nty toward others

flash.

tnowledge.

It may be the commonest masculine

haracteristic but it is stronger in joyous shout only a small

one men than others. In Paul s case very loud shout. It was

t was especially strong, for Paul had first an exclamation of pure joy. -,ad evervthine during his life; there- laughed this way now, and let

'ore. he always expected to have evrything. It is the point of view o! hose who are thoroughly spoiled.

bo when something was denied him

Heart Problems

ottitnA ,nA Vn nvA - lAftV fr 1

"""T v, - -."a T. ...;- and kindness will correct matters.

iiueu luvauie m.llitr jusicau ui iuvii j lack of manners. When it is possible! I to do a kind turn to those same neigh-; ! bors she should not hesitate to do it.! ! Perhaps some one is sick and would (

He had laughed that was a sudden iar Mrs. inompson: ir one uvea ; -sujoy V. ? I10. TJ uu a. o-1mc' rf i 1 I T Vl n"itihni T-v - r

and not in a neighborhood where every one b"" v.1 11 u ;

ui,., ', , . . poriunnies sne wm una ways oi pu-i more like knows everv one else and treats every . -; .;.:.u!

i . . ' "'s u.k meir lacs oi tuuiiesy "u

jur " mi itrutL, uui uni c- i Kinnnpss. np snnn n reiuse o ais-i

ELECTRIFY YOUR LAUNDRY Rocker Washers and Mangles American Beauty Irons, Etc.

WM. H. MEERHOFF 9 South 9th Phone 1236

the;

girl go, only to put both his arm-.;1 lEa gossips ana mm.. ewij around her and pull her roughly so;?bout every one else,' and if that per-1 she was close against him a bundle 'ton causes trouble for the whole' of overcoats, fur rugs, a hat and veil ' ,hWl, . . .,, . it '

u course mai one ming was waai . ' uuuuuuicuij u.tuij' uiurru,j ,.... . ... i -anted more than anything else in the : and somewhere, a face that was warn;on t0 the iocent one until no one j world. Patty's first refusal to go driv-1 and wet and lips that he could kiss. will speak to her, do you think she i ?ng with him after office hours, be-i "Well!" he exclaimed after a rno-j should care? Or should she think'

ment

about?

There was silence. Patty tried to pull away from him. But she didn't ! try hard, probably because sh was

quite tangled up in rugs and coats.

and because Paul was holding

tightly, and most likely because

! didn't want to pull away verv

her;

she : en-

Inn Klnmph

she lifted her eyes to the older wom

an's. "Sally dear!" There was no mistaking the unusual warmth of that greeting "Where have you been? I've tried to reach you, but nobody se'emed to know anything about you" Sally knew that Madam Brabant's keen eyes were summing up the details of her costume, noting its shabbiness, but she did not care She wanted to throw herself into her mother-in-law's arms and beg for news of Dick, but she lifted her cheek to be kissed, and only the trembling of the hand with which she grasped the other woman's warned Madam Brabant that the girl was not so calm as she seemed "Can't you come back here and sit with me?" she asked, and Sally accepted the invitation so eagerly that there could be no doubt of her desire to do so But when they had established themselves at the end of the row the girl was curiously uncommunicative about what she had been doing "You were staying with Barbara Lane when I saw you last have you been with her all summer?" asked the older woman Sally drew a long breath She wanted to tell the truth about the events of the last few months, but it was hard to do so "No, I I've been at the shore, with - ififnds," she replied slowly "Ami what do you think of Dick's latest?" Dick's mother continued "Of f-ourse. his father always predicted 'hat he would do it. yet it came as a

surpri.-e to me." Dirk's latest Sally wondered what it (ould be. Had he openly run away with his secretary? No, that couldn't be it, for Madame Brabant seemed! rather pleased Then the report about! his having lost his money couldn't be ti-no fiihpr shp wouldn't havp HV'Pil i

that S.illv wa- romnlptelv at a ln?s. I year-old

t shp did not want, to admit, her I Lee of tnis C-tv

Solly turned, and taw her mother-in-laic have missed him, and he'd have gone to England to meet me, when I'd just rushed home to see him," Madame Brabant went oa "Of course, I can understand hi3 not receiving my cablegram, but it surely would have been disastrous if we hadn't met Have you decided to open the house at Crooning Water, or will you come to me for a few days, until you are settled here in town?" The house at Crooning Water Sally thought of it with an aching heart. How she wished that she were really going to open it, and spend even a bit of the glorious autumn with Dick up there in the New Hampshire hills! It seemed to her at that moment to be the one spot in the world where she could find peace. She felt that she could not kgep up the pretense with Madame Brabant

any longer. Yet if Dick had not told

of their separation surely she ou

"ause of the jealousy of her sister, had

annoyed and then worried him. He wanted her to go and when then were days and days that she would not go, he wanted her desperately. He learned how much he missed her before that he had taken her for

granted, as part of his day's pleasant

Now she was refusing to see him at ; ously. all! He knew how much he would i "We're arguing that I've no busi-i miss her from the afternoons when ness to be here, that we ought not to' he moped around and finally got a po-' see each other," she began ' finally, i sition, partly to quiet his conscience. , "That your mother would be furious, I partly to fill up time. iforlehe wants you to marry Miss Mac-' So he turned and faced Patty in the Keen" (There! She had said it inj car, and said, "Oh yes. you must!" in sPitP of her resolutions) "That yourj positive tones when she announced motber thinks I'm only a stenogra-, again that she should not see him. , Pher, one of the people she's brought!

"I simply can't get along without you." he burst cut. He would have seen instantly through any girl, had she tried this on him experimentally. It was rather obvious leading a chap on until he wi? interested, then dropping him so h? could know what he was missing, and so making him commit himself seriously as being in love. But Patty was genuine he knew that. She never had tried to deceive or to coquet now, Miriam Nestor MacKeen would have proved her de

sirability to Paul in some very subtle

and clever fashion. And Paul, used to these undercurrents, would have seen through it. and laughed and flirted a little with her.

"Then what are we arguing ; thev have no knowledge of good maT1.

But he knew Patty was real he

ght not ' knew there was not a bit of coquetry

to do so. She was glad when the cur- m n,Jr- ue Faw lnp agony in ner mutain rnsp and -ho wus relieved of tholeyes as he looked at him. Saw th'i

need for further conversation. She had j drained lines of her face, though the

replied "I don't know,"

to Madame

Brabant's last question; now, under cover of the darkness, she studied the older woman's face. Just how much did she know? Sally had never felt that Madame Brabant cared for her; the relationship between them had been a polite, perfunctory one, a fact which Dick had regretted because of the sincere devotion which he had for his mother. But Madame Brabant had stood for all that

Sally hated for the many conventions

and

tiny

the onlv light

lamp over the

road was dark

came from the

speedometer.

"I simply can't get a'ong without you," he repeated. And he put a ' hand on her shoulder. "You've made ' me want to be something but an idler and a waster in the world. I never knew what fun it was to end a dav feeling I had done something until ; I found a job and wcr'-"d. You made j me do that." i He was wearing big driving gloves j that were leather on the inside of the 1

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Increases the action of the intestines Hundreds of men and women have already found freedom from laxatives by eating Fleischmann's fresh yeast. Doctors are now agreed that proper elimination of waste matter should be brought about by food. One doctor comes right out and states plainly that the indiscriminate use of cathartics is one of the causes of constipation. Physicians all over the country are recommending Fleischmann's fresh yeast because it is a fresh food, rich in those elements which keep the intestines healthy. In one series of tested cases, normal functions were restored in from 3 days to 5 weeks. Try it out for yourself. Begin today byadding 2 or 3 cakesofFlischmann's Yeast to your everyday diet. Keep it up and see how normally and regularly ycur intestines act. Be sure it's Fleischmann's Yeast the familiar tin-. oil oack-

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Chard) ( THICK V SHEET

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which seemed so meaningless. She

adored the very restrictions which j palm, and rough fur over the back-; made Sally so wretched; she had al-' of the fingers and the hand. Moved ways felt, too, that it was the phi's! by an irresistable impulse, Patty

duty to settle down at home with Dick a sthe center of her life, and Sally had resented that Littery. She had wanted to see life. Well, now she had seen it, and had lost Dick in the seeing, she told herself bitterly. She had neither had her cake nor eaten it: But the news that Dick was still in town was welcome She would see him, no matter how much she had to humble her pride to do so. Tomorrow A' Change in Graham Browne.

INFANT SWALLOWS OPEN SAFETY PIN BEDFORD, Ind.. June 2. The one-

son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry

is in a critical con

turned her head aEd put her cheek ; against the rough, furry "back of the glove. In response, she felt the weight of his hand more heavily on her shoulder. And a feeling so happy that it hurt ran through her. ! ""I never knew girls did anything hut pay $500 for a gown, to dance in all night. I thought they slept all day and had tea and -.vein to matinees and just went about like that butterflies, doing nothing but being pretty ex-

ignorance. Her mother-in-law would iomon taay s 'ne result ot swai.owhave been shocked at Dick's giving his ' an PPn safety pin two inche?j wife her freedom for a vear and ! long, which it picked up while playing1 this was no time to tell her that the j on the floor at its home. plan had failed. ' iihmh im.hb mmnm 1

"It just proves that his father was risrh t, doesn't it?" she replied after a; moment. j "Yes, I suppose so. He's looking remarkably well, isn't he? I told him. this morning that he hadn't looked so! well in years." I

Thi. mora ins then Dick hadn't

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1 ill. ! ill 1 II 111 I11CII JL 'lv IV UdUU t MHMn-lHnn

its tne wonaer-navor 1 ' x1..

c

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Every spoonful of Kelloggs Corn Flakes is a taste sensation a thrill ! Such delicious flavor in a cereal! And, Kellogg's crisp crunchiness beats description! Kellogg's are never tough, never leathery, never hard to eat! Little folks, as well as big folks, will mighty quickly "speak their piece" about Kellogg's! No imitation ever could compare with Kellogg's Corn Flakes and your good taste will prove

You want KELLOGG'S and you'll get Kellogg's if you insist upon Kellogg's in the RED and GREEN package that bears the signature of W. K. Kellogg, originator of Corn Flakes! NONE ARE GENUINE WITHOUT IT!

WEDDING RINGS The very latest designs in Wedding Rings are now being shown in our new stocks. Your choice of either white gold or platinum, plain, diamond set, or engraved style. Our prices you'll find to be reasonable considering the quality Rings we offer. Jenkins & Co. 726 Main St.

i,7"" L nsLT 7VWshJr-

i Clip and Mail

WEISBROD MUSIC CO., Richmond, Ind. Please send me floor patterns, piano catalogs, and folder on the Junior Unfolding TwoLevel Pedal. Also selected list of special piano bargains. Name Address

lL

IMS COMPLETE Small G

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Oisr Special Terms! Our low prices are made still more attractive by our unusual terms . Choose your piano now. Pay down only a small sum. Convenient monthly payments care for the balance. Liberal allowances on all musical instruments taken in part exchange. Call, or rnail coupon above for details!

t &smO. Plana

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Keels Oxfords

mi

TOASTED CORN FLAKES

COBN FLAKES

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Trimmed in white or black: ideal for sport or general wear. All sizes

$4.50

Also complete showing of white In STRAPS and OXFORDS with low or high heels, ranging in price from $2.65 to $6.00 Beckman & Kreimeier 708 Main

BARGAINS This Week Slightly used pianos of dependable quality, very lowpriced. HAMILTON Polished mahogany. Here is a rare value. Fine musical value and in splendid playing condition. $210

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ALWAYS the first object to catch the eye Jl. of one entering a room, the grand piano at once makes clear the taste and standing of its possessor. For generations it has been a mark of distinction an index of culture and refinement. Once the grand piano was exclusively the property of the royal court. And it long remained a luxury which only the very rich could attain. Its large size, its formidable volume of tone, demanded a vast room; its cost was excessive for an instrument for the

home.

Proportioned to the Modern Home

$180

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$135

Now all the incomparable tonal quality of the grand, its dignity, its elegance, its grace and beauty of line, have been brought within a size proportioned to the home of moderate dimensions. The Lyon & Healy Apartment Grand Piano takes but little more space than an upright. With the musical superiority of the finest concert grand, its voice has yet been modulated to suit the modern living room. The First COMPLETE Piano No matter how fine the instrument, every piano heretofore has left something to be desired. For the small child could not play it properly. The Pedals were beyond his reach. He could not give expression to the music.

Q. R. S. Word Rolls

This weakness in the piano long recognized has never until now been satisfactorily remedied. Now, however, Lyon fis Healy have

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Art-Echo Reproducing Rolls

,

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