Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 144, 17 June 1922 — Page 5

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THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND., SATURDAY, JUNE 17, 1922.

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WHO'S WHO AMI WHAT'S i HAPPENED Sally Brabant, a social butterfly, Trias tiffpn given a yeais leave of absence by her htmband. Rlohard Brabant, who hopes that she will learn something of life. She sees nuch of Keith Gilbert, not realizing that all New York Is RosMping about them. She Js horrified to learn that, despite his cocial position and apparent wealth, he Is a bootlesrirer. She attempts to earn her own llvlnt unnucopssf ully. but

through her newly trained knowledge of people is abl to help several persons whose affairs have become badly entangled. She learns that"'the pursuit of pleasureis vain, and .etns to envy Barbara Lane, an old-fashioned wife of her acquaintance, whom she has always been Inclined to pity. She ?oes to a midnight dance club with some of her r.ew friends, and there encounters her husband, after months of separation. One of the men crows quarrelsome when Dick asks Sally to dance, and Dick suizxests that he take her home. Sally misunderstands something L'ick says, and thinks he has fallen In love with his secretary. CHAPTER XC JOURNEY'S END Sally and Dick stood there on the sidewalk as the first light of dawn rept over the housetops, clinging to each other's hand3, both trying to talk

at once. "I didn't know that you cared I thought I'd try to make you jealous and &ee if you really did," he told her earnestly. "Then, when you protest-

Paul was quite right when he said hl3 mother had a bad heart "sometimes" the occasions when it was bad al-i ways happening at the best time for Mrs. Darlington to get her way. It was a last resort with her, this heart attack. Her doctor knew it was ner-

mony, as a temporary widow," Sally , vou3 indigestion, caused by fretting told her husband, as the door of the over opposition to her plans. But living room closed behind the depart--ft him better, and pleased her ing "Buttons." j more to have the word heart used "Then you're glad to come back tOiratner tnan stomach. I "I wouldn't worry," Mrs. Munn com-

Jforted him. "I thought she" looked

I remarkably well."

Paul said

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SPOKTS PREPARE FOR LIFE, SAYS WOMAN DOCTOR

Inert Klumph

married you when you were such ai youngster, Sally, and nerer felt sure i that you really loved me. It seemed i as If I'd just talked you Into marriage j

without your knowing whether you

r vanted to be my "wife or not. - "Then, when vou said that vou cared.

that you wouldn't let me go well, I've never in my life heard anything that made me happier. I didn't realize that we were so near your home; I was froing to turn around in a second and

take you in my arms, and tell you that the secretary wajit' going to marry me at all she's already married." "Already married:' repeated Sally. "Yes she was married just before the went West, and her husband went dong; that camping trip was their honeymoon. . Why honey, she you well, there couldn't be anyone but you for me; surely you know that. I've been nearly frantic, wondering what wa3 happening to you. Calhoun kept me informed, of course you didn't know that I employed him to look efter you. did you? I was afraid of what Gilbert might do. "It was harder than I'd thought It would be to leave you without money, but that seemed the best way of letting you have all your experience at once; I knew I could never stand

"We'll 'begin our married, life all ever" ha told her. the school of marriage and take on your degree of M. R. S. again?" ho asked, as he took her in his arms. "That and another one, I hope," she answered, softlv "It hoc-ins; with

ed so wildly, I was M too but it's not Mrs., dear it's

Mother." THE END

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EFWORTH CONVENTION AT LIBERTY MONDAY LIBERTY, Ind., June 17. An Epworth League convention, which will

be attended by 200 delegates rrom Fayette, Shelby, Franklin, Hancock and Union counties, will open in Liberty

Monday. Delegates will represent 69 churches and 35 pastorates. Bishop Thirkield of Mexico, home to attend a bishops' convention in Indianapolis, will address the convention on Tuesday, speaking in the afternoon on "Our Chances in Mexico," and in the evening on "The Building of a Man.' Dr. J. M. Walker, district superintendent, will conduct the evening services Monday. Mrs. C. E. Turley. Ox

ford, Ohio, will have charge of the Junior hour and will talk to the delegates at 10:45 Tuesday morning. Rev R. D. Pearson of Waldron, district president, will have charge of the convention, The Connersville church will send 35 members to stage a stunt which they expect to carry off the prize offered for the best stunt on Monday evening. A platform, flanked by a big camp fire, will be placed on the church lawn. :

so glad of it that I

didn't dare look at you. You see, I

After Ten Years By MAKION RUBINCAM

A WAY OUT Chapter 83 Paul remembered that when he was a small boy, he used to stand and feel perfectly helpless before his mother. She had a serene ruthlessness that baffled him then when he could not explain it, and that baffled him equal

ly now that he was grown and could recognize it. She had a way of going on with her own plans, with a calm disregard of everyone who came in her way. ' So it was now. Paul wanted his mother to receive Patty, and she. refused. He tried to get around that by taking Patty to his friends for if they received her, as of course they would, his mother would be compelled to in the end. Now his mother chilled his line of reasoning by the claiming these friends as her own and not his. That made him feel that she had all the

rights in the friendship, and he had

She ha3 been paler,'

he was worried a little. . "Perhaps, but that doesn't necessarily mean that her heart has been

bothering her." Mrs. Munn did not add that Paul's

mother could affect pallor as easily as she could rosy health. Both were becoming to her. She made herself artistic no matter what role she chose to play and all sorts of complexions can be had in delicate perfumed French jars. "Where is Patty?" Mrs. Munn asked a little later. Paul explained that he had asked her to meet him there. "I can't stand that tiny flat with so many people around, I can't say a word without the whole family overhearing," he complained. "We spent our whole time together, since we've known each other, in my car or taking walks.

When she comes here, we're going to walk up the Avenue and then I'll take i her home." Patty came in then, her cheeks

flushed from the sting of the air, her

eyes sparkling with pleasure as she looked at these two people who made up her entire world. Mrs. Munn watched them together.

She could see the devotion under their!

perfectly 'correct and casual manner. A certain amount of opposition was: a good thing for a love affair, she de

cided. Then she felt sorry for them, ! t they were so perfectly lost in the huge ', Of quite another stripe are the city. They, literally, hadn't a place ! traditions of the tavern. All mail to Sit and talk. Irvmr-hps started iheir triDS from the

Dr. Anna L. Brown.

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Are athletic sports "ladylike" or & they too harmful or violent for g.s and women as future mothers? Dr. Anna L. Brown, head of the physical education department of the national board of the Y. W.

C A savs thnt thp Kurireme value i

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fit the fr:rl or woman for life. For whatever physical effort she seeks to undertake bcr physical strength is ready.

m.

"I'm off for an hour's visit," sho

i inn. The mail coach driver was a

Said suddenlv. cpttinc iin "Vnn tn-n

had better sit by the fire and talk!sort of handy man for the community

until I come back." j somewhat as the rural mail carrier She had two plans for a way out. j js now. In many sections he was When she left the house, she turned known as a reliable bootlegger of

uown me street toward ratty s own nmohpd came

home.

Tomorrow Indecision.

a year without you, and I thought that! none. So he stood there in the draw

perhaps six very strenuous months

would be better than a year of quieter ones. But tell me did you mean that you eared for me?" "Mean it!" Sally's arms went around his neck; her head was nestled down on his shoulder. "Dick, I never want to be without you, again. And I wish that every woman in the world who thinks that her husband and home bore her could have the experiences I've had and feel the way I do this minute!" "Then hut that policeman Is staring rather hard; shall we go upstairs and get your things and go home?" "We can't go home there isn't any

home to go to, except, the house at

V. Crooning Water, and .New Hampsnire

i3 rather far, at this time in the morn

ing," Sally laughed.

ing room in front of her, as angry, as

helpless, as when he stood before her in the nursery and met her cold rebuke for some childish fault. He had one way out. "I'm going to elope with you," he told Patty the next timo he saw her. Patty turned wide gray eyes on

him, surprise and then protest in their

expression.

"Oh no," she Faid decidedly, "you musn't do anything like that. She would be furious, she would disown you." "I don't care." But Patty knew he

would, for his mother had an enormous influence over him. Every girl probably has a secret desire to be run away with. An elopement is such a romantic thing! And

for ten minutes Patty played with the

OLD COFFEE HOUSE CRADLE OF MAILS

From the Detroit News The coffee house and the foreign mail service were both young things together. When coffee was the newest beverage and the London coffee house tables were the regular rendezvous of those who' talked big business in the days of clipper ships, the foreign mail service to all continents

was just beginning and ship's mail pouches hung in every coffee house of any importance. Matters of marine insurance were settled over a cup of coffee, too, and talk of crews and cargoes and consignments and concessions were heard at the tables. In brief, big business began over a cup of coffee.

Missing the regular mail letters .

were sometimes taken at the inns by U4 the coach drivers. There were mail ,

robberies often enough ana tney worked out a system a century ago, of having armed guards on the box of each coach, "since robbery was rife." Rates were high, postage was seldom prepaid, charges varied with distances and routes; it took a whole day's wages to send a letter any distance.

REFRIGERATORS FERD GROTHAUS Furniture of Quality 614-616 Main St.

Enjoy the Daily Concerts by Radiophone in Your Home Ilail's Electric Shop 1027 Main Phone 2434

Then I'll tell you; let's go to tho idea, wishing they might, not quite

hotel we went to when we came back from our honeymoon, shall we? We'll

begin all over again, just as we began then. And tomorrow we'll get an apartment , and " "Tomorrow we'll see if Babs and Andy still want to sell 'Wee-acre', their little house at Tarry town," she Interrupted. "That's what I want, Dick a little house in a small town, where we can really be at home." They climbed the flights of stalra down which she had hurried so short a time before, and he wandered about while she packed a suitcase and changed her frock. And then they journeyed uptown for his bags, and reached their hotel Just as the earliest scrubwomen were starting work. The night clerk stared at them disapprovingly. Sally looked so radiant and Dick so happy that he set them down in his own mind as an eloping

couple, and he did not approve of elopements. He all but asked to see their marriage license, but he gave them a suite, neverth,eless, and sum-

daring to say so, turning to smile at Paul when he talked about it, wavering. Had Paul been more persistent, it Is quite likely she would have run off with him. And the rest of the story would have been quite different. But as it was, she repeated her refusal, and Paul, who really was a lit

tle in terror of his mother, did not

urge her. and the plan fell through.

Then Paul went to Mrs. GraingerMunn. "Have you got any influence with my mother?" he asked her, after sho had told how glad she was of the engagement. "Has anyone?" Mr3. Munn answered and laughed. Paul laughed. "I suppose not," he agreed. "As a matter of fact." Mrs. Munn went on, "She was here this afternoon. It's the first time I've seen her since I've been home from the sanatarium, and since this engagement

TO STOP COIGHIXG AT NIGHT I A summer bronchial cougui keeps ' not only the sufferer but other nnm- !

bers of the family awake. Alfred ll'l rbiip 1 1 . . . . I 1 f l - . T T -

pool. O., writes: ' I consider it mv dutvli The Kept Place to lrade to write and tell the results of Foley's I . e a. n Honey and Tar, which I used for my i I Alter All

boy who had been suffering from aj

uruncniai cougn lor I or X weeks. Foley's Honey and Tar has done him wonderful good, and I shall always recommend it." It soothes and heals. A. G. Luken Drug Co., 625-62S Main street. Advertisement.

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moned a drowsy bellboy to take their of your's has taken place." luggage "Do you tninlt 1ve worried her?

"I feel like a bride who's been tak-! aui asuea anxiously, "bne has a inc a post-graduate course in matri-lbad heart, sometimes. I wouldn't " I want to "

Mrs. Munn smiled a little at this.

BABY

CHANGES EVERY DAY

but those tiny hands, the fat little dimples, that cunning little smile can be mad-" permanent in a portrait.

Think it Over

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PHOTOS

722 MAIN ST RICHMONd INQ

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Heart Problems

Dear Mrs. Thompson: I am a 6tranger here and I am engaged to a girL I am twenty-five years old. My work calls me to B. C. soon and she has refused me. It seems I cannot leave her so far behind. Would you leave and try to forget, or would you keep on trying for her? A. L. C. If the girl loved you as much as

the should, she would go with you un-;

less some very good reason Kept ner at home. I would advise you to leave p.rd to give your absorbing thought to our work. You are young and will be r.bl? to forget in time.

WELDON'S Formerly Reed Furniture Co. i For SUMMER FURNITURE

SATISFYING That is your expression with every bite of our Bread or Pastries.

No Doctor Needed A Bath a Day Keeps You Fit Every Way. See

H. MEERHOFF, 9 S. 9th St. for the equipment.

MONDAY SPECIAL

BRAN COOKIES per dozen

10c

New System Bakery 913 Main St.

;p

y Snarklin Grace Juice PS

c

Sparkling Grape Juice

Vermouth Cordial White Catawba Grape Juice 5 Fruit Syrup Virginia Dare Wine Loganberry Juice Boiled Cider

Grenadine Cordial

Welch's Concord Grape Juice Cliquot Clug Ginger Ale Budweiser Beer Grape Fruit Juice Appella Apple Juice Manitou Spring Water

(Gennett Records play on Victor, Columbia, Brunswick and other makes of phonographs without any special attachment. On the Edison with an attachment) A few of the New July Gennett Records which are Especially Popular! 1S50 "Calling Thee" (sacred) .75 "When I Look Into His Face" (sacred), sung by Rodeheaver and Asher. 4868 "Carolina Rolling Stone" (Fox trot) .75 "California" (Fox trot), Bailey's Lucky Seven 4869 "Black-Eyed Blues" (Fox trot) .75 "Muscle Shoals Blues (Fox trot), Ladd's Black Aces. 4873 "Some Sunny Day," sung by Arthur Fields. .75 "My Machree's Lullaby," sung by Sam Ash. 4876 "By the Sapphire Sea" (Fox trot), Hazey Natzy and his orchestra. .75 "On the Alamo" (Fox trot), Lanin's Famous Players. You will find a Gennett Record Suitable to your peculiar moods at all times. The Starr Piano Co. 931-935 Main Street

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The One Big Event of Every Week is Our

Look what we are offering this Monday and also look at the prices

SUMMER DRESS GOODS-BUY THESE MONDAY

35c Devonshire Romper Cloths for Monday, yard ' 39c Extra Large and Heavy Turkish Towels, Monday 15c Unbleached Muslin for Monday t 25c Dress Ginghams, new patterns, Monday, yard 75c Extra Good Quality Ratines, Monday, yard $1.23 Sport Shirtings in checks and stripes, Monday, yard ,

19c 19c 10c 15c 59c 89c

75c New Summer Tissues for Monday, yard fl-00 Fine Swiss Organdies, 45 inches wide, Monday, yard 50c Summer Dress Voiles and Batistes 40-in. wide, Monday, yard 50c yard wide Beach Cloths for Monday, yard 35c White Plisse Crepes and Pajama checks, Monday, yard 15c yard wide Curtain Goods, Monday, yard

39c 75c 35c 19c 19'i 10 c

A Sale on SHOES Monday Ladies 1-strap low-heel Comfort J- - Q Slippers at tDxit 4 styles Ladies' Black Oxfords Men's Outing style Work Shoes Boys' and Girls' Tennis Slippers 83 C Ladies' 1-strap Satin Slippers 08 Barefoot Sandals 98 to S1.69

Special June Clearance Sale of . MILLINERY All Children's Hats i2 Price All Trimmings 2 Price One lot of Untrimmed Hats 49 One lot of Trimmed Hats 98 All Spring Hats in our stock including Trfmmed and Untrimmed, black and all colors, botlu large and small, Monday y.t Price One lot of Sport Hats fil.75 Again we offer our new line of midsummer millinery of sport, white satin, hair braid, fancy leghorns and the new feather Hats Montiay only at 33'3 discount

MEN! BUY THESE MONDAY

Men's Union Suits, made of good quality nainsook, sizes 34 to 46; special Monday, a suit 5S One lot of Boys' Suits, grey Tweeds with two pairs lined trousers, all sizes, special for Monday '-S9.45 Men's Dress Shirts, either collar attached or neckbands, all sizes, special Monday . -88i

Boys extra good quality khaki Trousers, dark colors, all sizes, special Monday S2 Men's Sport Shirts, plain blues, white and fancy stripes, sizes 141-2 to 17, Monday 98 One lot of Boys' White Mesh Union Suits, sizes 4 to 14 yrs., very special Monday, suit 35 Suit Cases, 24-in. size, black or tan; special Monday 9S

Men's Balbriggan Shirts and Drawers, short or lortg sleeve shirts, all sizes, specfial Monday, a garment ,. . . -48 Boys' Sport Blouses, plain whites, tans and stripes, sizes 6 to 16 years, Mondiay .-79 Men's Wash Tro-users, all sizes, light or darlt patterns, special Monday, pair 1.65

iiimmer Dresses . . $4.95

Voile and Organdy, just received, Monday only WHITE VOILE WAISTS MondayOnly 89c Special Values in Hosiery and Underwear for Monday

Elastic top flesh colored Corsets, very good , for summer wear., regular J1.00; special for Monday TQd Pure white Silk drop stitch and lace hose, $1.50 values; Monday 98 N'gw plain Gingham Bungalow Aprons, Cretonne Trimmed, special for Monday .-S1.49

Muslin Envelope Chemise, white and flesh colored, $1.00 values, Monday 69 Ladies' Athletic Union Suits, bodice top, flesh or white, Monday SI .59 35c light weight mesh Brassiers. flesh colored, special Monday 19 Children's fine ribbed white Hose, all sizes, Monday 22?

New flesh colored Wash Satin Camisoles, an unusual special for Monday S1.00 Children's mercerized Half Socks, all colors and sizes, Monday, 3 pairs for 1.00 Very new light weight step-in bloomers ar1 bodice vests to match, Monday onlv, per 6Uit S1.79

Buy These Specials Monday Just Look at These Prices Dark green Window Shades, Monday -4S Remnants of Cretonnes and Terry Cloths, Monday, each ; 10 $40.00 Axminster Rugs, 9x12, in seconds, for Monday S24.9S Seconds of 39c to 50c Turkish Towels for Monday only ; 15. $2.50 Chenile Rugs, all colors, Monday 1.50 Flat Curtain Rods, Monday 10 $5.00 Bed Spreads, extra large size, in seconds, Monday S1.98 Remnants of Curtain Goods for Monday 5 Yard wide Rug Filling for Monday, yd J9 9x12 Linoleum and Neponset Rugs, special for Monday S9.98 $12.50 Guaranteed All Felt Mattresses, full size. Monday only SS.9S $S.00 full size Sagless Bed Springs, special for Monday. S5.93 Curtain Rods of all kinds at Special Prices. 9x12 Seamless Grass Rugs, Monday .-S4.9S Ice Water Pitcher, 2-qt., covered or plain lip, Monday special 50

Monday is the Time to Buy House Furnishings Plain Colonial Glass Tumblers, Monday special a dozen 39d .Jelly Glasses, medium size with tin covered tops, Monday special, dozen ' 3S Ice Tea Glasses, grape cut pattern, 12-oz size; Monday special, each 19 Plain white Dinner Plates, Monday special 6 for - oO Aluminum Pudding Pat Set, 3 in a set, 1-qt., 2-qt. and 3-qt. Monday special, set -89c Square Aluminum Roaster, Monday ...... 89 Garbage Can, galvanized, 4-gallon size, Monday special 69 Mason quart Fruit Cans, Monday special, per dozen S5 Galvanized Wash Boiler and lid, Monday special 95 Stone Slop Jar with bail and lid; Monday special at 49 Gray Granite Slop Jar with bail and lid, Monday special 9o Ball Bearing enclosed cog wheel Wringer, 3year guarantee, Monday special ... 5 39 Split Clothes Basket, large size, Monday .-69

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