Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 38, Number 226, 31 July 1913 — Page 8

PAGE EIGHT

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, THURSDAY, JULY 31, 1913

PALLADIUM'S MAGAZINE AMD HOME PAGE

(Copyright 1913 by the Press Publish Ing Company. (New York World)

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FASHIONS OF THE MOMENT

A Charming Summer Gown Fully Descr; ed by Olivette.

BEAUTY SECRETS OF BEAUTIFUL WOMEN A Host of Valuable Hints from Jise Collins.

MARRIED LIFE THE FIRST YEAR

THE CRYING BABY

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BY OLIVETTE. HERE is a little summer costume that may be truly called a "confection," though we generally prefer not to use that gastronomic term in the description of even the dreams of the sartorial realm. White or shell pink is the foun ation of heavy grade china or shantung Ilk. There is an eight-inch slit over the left ankle, and all about the hem tiny pink wild roses are set at equal intervals. The overskirt is of wide shadow lace falling to the knees at the front and lengthening some eight Inches tinder the caught-in drapery at the back. A garland of the roses peeks from under this, and another surmounts the wide girdle and rises to meet the square-cut vest of filmy white chiffon. Both waist and puff sleeves are of lace, and another garland of the dear little wild roses nestles under the sleeve at the elbow. The hat is a great rouna wmte Neapolitan covered with frill after frill of 'white accordian plaited maline, with a monster pink rose crushing in all the fllminess at the left. Dainty white slippers and silk stockings, and a filmy parasol with a wide border of chiffon printed in great pink roses, complete an absolutely Ideal summer costume.

ABOUT the hardest work I know is just being a beauty. For there is the ever-present dread that if you relax eternal vigilance, your greatest stock-in-trade will diminish and dwindle to nothingners! On the ether hand, if you are merely on the way to the acquisition of beauty, any little trace of

! loveliness you acquire is net gain, j However, queenly Jose Collins, of j the Ziegfeld Follies of 1913 refuses to worry about the ravages of time or ' avoirdupois. "If I get fat, I get fat," j said she with complacent conviction: j "I refuse to worry about it, and to lay j in a supply of wrinkles and gray I hajr and insomnia dulled eyes. The

women in New York have gone mad on the subject, and they would probably look far better fat and cheertul than with the haunted-by-the-fear-of-another-pound look they all wear. EAT SPARINGLY. "I eat sparingly In hot weather, because then I don't feel warm and loggy I breakfast on hot water and figs, and I eat fruit and salads without oil in great quantities. That keeps my system clear and in good working order. I never eat hot foods in summer, for that would mean putting in some

j internal heat when we are sufficiently

bathed in the warm atmosphere. I keep a watch on my system if it grows tired, or poisoned by some food that was not all.it should have been, why, I live on some sort of fermented inilk product some of the lactic acid drinks that put me in sweet, healthy trim soon again. Every one ought to be her own diet expert. "I've another notion, if you care to hear it: every woman ought to be her own manicure expert, too. Beautiful hands are improved by pink, smooth,

shell-like nails with neat half moons !

and white tips. Lay in a supply of rounded orange wood sticks, some cuticle remover, a cuticle food, a buffer, a flexible file, one of the standard polishing pastes, and a nail bleach for removing stains from under the nails. Spend five minutes with the nails night and morning, training them into shapely, smooth cleanliness, and see what splendid results you get this would be my advice to all girls. "Cold cream to make the hands smooth; careful drying to keep them so, and a little stretching and pulling and patting into long, graceful lines will make the ugliest hand more attractive. And if a fairly pretty hand

is scrupulously smooth and clean, and is tipped by t moothly rounded pink ! nails with no sail or jagged cuticle to j mar their outlines, it will be sure to j give the impression of being very i

pretty indeed." "Every woman her own diet expert and manicurist," I mused. "Then Miss

Collins, you may think also that every i woman should be her own hair dresser ; and an expert on the care of the hair, j

too." CARE OF THE HAIR.

"Indeed I do," agreed the dark-eyed :

beauty whose wonderful voice and delightful acting are two of the charms she adds to merely appearing In glowing radiance on the stage. "I think

every girl can train her hair in the j way it should go-I think it well worth time and patience to learn how to take care of your hair. i "And I think a girl should find a j simple, pretty and becoming style of ;

hair-dressing and stick to it. It is not fair to train the hair in one direction and then go yanking it off into some other way. A water wave can be put in and even straight, lanky hair taught to look fluffy and pretty. "J ust after your next shampoo press your still damp bair into waves with

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By Mabel Herbert Urncr. The baby was over three weeks old now. The, trained nurse was gone, a "nursing maid" had been installed to take care of the baby, and with the help of Anna the household machinery began to move more regularly again. Helen was still weak, still under the care of Che doctor, but ehe was gradually getting back her strength. The sleepless nights and anxiety had told on Warren, and while he went regularly to his office and worked later than usual to make up for the time lost, he was not at all well. Anna, too, had caught a cold running out bareheaded on errands the night of the baby's birth. The cold had settled in her head and made her a little hard of hearing and somewhat cross. Wonderful Lung Power. So the only one in the household who at this time was really well and flourishing was the baby. And the main exhibition of its strength and lustiness was in its lungs. Its ability to cry loudly and persistently seemed out of all propcrtion of it3 size. It was astounding that so small a thing could make so much noise. And it seemed to cry for no reason at all except merely to exercise its voice. It would cry before it was fed and it would cry afterward. It shouted while it was being bathed, and worked itself into a paroxysm while they dressed it. The only time it didn't cry was when It was asleep. When it was asleep! The whole household walked cn tiptoe and whispered when it was asleep! "Tho baby's asleep!" was a signal for instant silence from every one. Don't Wake the Baby. The telephone and doorbell had been carefully muffled until they made only the faintest sound; and the janitor and tradesmen were instructed never to shout loudly up the dumb waiter. Ail the workings of the apartment were bo arranged so as not to "wake the baby." To Helen, now, the getting of the baby asleep and keeping it asleep had become the most important things in life. Beside that everything else was secondary. Callers were gTeeted with shrill Infantile yells or with a dead silence, while Anna informed them in sepulchral whispers that the "baby was asleep" and would they please be very careful. . . And then they would be ushered into Helen's room where she would meet them with a warning wave of her hand toward the nnrsery and talk to them in strained, worried whispers. "Oh. yes the baby is well, she would explain, "but it's so hard to gst her to sleep we den't like to awaken her she is very apt to cryAnd Then the Baby Woke Up. And then almost always, in spite of

LARGE SHIPMENT

their care, the baby would awaken and demonstrate to the caller just how it could cry. Then Hcien would haT.e to take It and nervcusly try to soothe it, while the calling friends would offer various well-meant suggestions and efforts at diverting its attention at all of which the baby would only cry the louder. "Baby pretty b-by fee the pretty chain! Look! Lock, baby, the pretty chain!" dangling before It a chain from a silver purse. But the baby would positively r. fuse to sec the chain and would only grow more red in the face and more vociferous at each trifle, such as a glove cr a handkerchief, that the visitor would offer for Its distraction. "I think, perhaps. It is not used to strangers," Helen would always have to suggest in the end. And then, the friends would finally depart after asking anxiously if she was sure it wasn't hungry, or dldnt It have the cclic, or a pin sticking It somewhere. Just Wanted to Cry. Helen would re-assure them as to all these things and wlien they were gone would go on wearily rocking the baby, knowing that there was nothing uu matter, tut tbat it just wanted to cry and would cry until It decided to stop. And. usually, by that time, Helen was tired and nervous and hysterical enough to cry herself. It was the visits of "his people" ihat she dreaded the most his mother and aunts. The baby always cried the IcudcEt and longest when they came. And In seme way they always managed to make her feel that it was her fault. Surely something was wrong cr it would not cry like that "And Warren was such a good baby suca a very good taby!" they would assure her. "He really never cried at all! Warren's Angelic Infancy. Then they would tell Incidents cf Warren's angelic infantile disposition, how he would lie in his crib for hours and suck his thumb and never even whimper! And now even when ho was bathed and dressed he never cried that he was always a laughing, gurgling, good natured baby. "That is why it seems so strange,' they would carefully explain, "that this baby should cry so much!" The Inference that Helen herself must have been a most disagreeable baby was quite clear. Again and again, when her patience had been tried almost beyond bearing, she had longed to tell them that If the baby's crying annoyed them so much they bad better remain where they could not hear it. But she didnt for Warren's sake she didn't. With all the additional expense things were difficult enough for him just now. She did not want to distress him more by a further estrange-, ment with his family.

ATTENDS MEETING AT INDIANAPOLIS

HORSE WENT TO SHOP FOR REFIT

(Palladium Special) ECONOMY. Ind., July '31. The other morning, Betty, a horse belonging to W. Ij. Fenimore, walked out of the

barn and down to the blacksmith shop. The men at the shop tried to arive her away, but Betty persisted In coming in. As Betty had been shod a few days before. Mr. Fenimore thinks that her shoes were hurting her, and that she wanlJhem fixed.

L. B. Campbell, manager of the local business college, has returned rfom

the convention of the Live Wire club, which was held on Monday and Tuesday of this week, and was a great success, according to Mr. CampbelL The convention has for its purpose the advancement into general use of the stenotype, a machine devised to facilitate the taking of dictations. The officers are elected by the amount of work they do along this line. Of all the school represented, sixteen made a perfect score, among them the local schooL The following is a list of the officers: J. P. Simons, Superior, Wis., president; Morton MacCormack. Chicago, vice president; Mrs. H. B. Carey, Lexington, Ky secretary; A. F. Gates, Waterloo, la., treasurer; board of directors, C. L. McNltt, chairman, Baraboo. Wis.: C W. Robbins, Sedalia, Wis., R. M. Utterback, Matoon, 111,

your fingers and pin the waves into place, and, with the waves still pinned, allow the hair to get perfectly dry; pinch these same waves into place morning and evening with a bit of hot water to add stability to the hair as it dries. Of course, this won't make naturally curly hair but it will give a pretty fluffy look to locks that might otherwise be an imitation of seaweed. "If your hair is too long or too thick to manage, cut out a bit of it if it be too thin, go to an expert for a tonic

and apply it faithfully with a loosening, circular motion that Is splendid for the scalp and then you will probably have a crowning glory instead of just 'hair'!" So. i.ittio M's Wonl.'T-r-----4-' :" wcrk away at being your own sane little diet exptrt. iiiia maj;i.. and hair specialist, and see if you do not fall heir to some of beautiful, stately Jose Collins' healthful magnetic charm. LILIAN LAUFERTY.

CAMBRIDGE CITY, Ir.d., July 31. j The Standard Manufacturing company, j cf this city, is shipping 3,372 folding chairs to the Webber company, of San , Francisco, this wee.k. This is the j largest individual shipment ever made , from the factory. I

WANTED Ansker book for the Indianapolis Star's "Book Lover's" Contest. Phone 2553. -

HICKS CAPO DIN

IN A LITTLE. WATER r.UiOiw tfa oasaa. 'Wtmbar frost jUd. griPP. or rrrooaaM. tOc 2C-. mn4 80.

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J. D. Randolph, Ottawa, 111., W. B. El- j Enos Spenser, Louisville, Ky, L. B. liott. Wheeling, W. Va.. H. B. Boyles. ! CampbelL Richmond. Ind.. C. C. Short,

Omaha, Neb., A. W. Lane, Boulder, : Youngstown, O., and Hugh Woodard, !

Colo., H. K. Ford, Little Rock. Ark ; Knoxville, Tenn.

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Found Trip

EXCURSION TO-

Rocnl Trip

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S1-35 Indianapolis S1'3

EViESR.Y SUNDAY Terre Haute, Indianapolis and Eastern Traction Co., GOOD GOING only on special and regular train leaving Richmond at 5:00 a. m. each Sunday. Th:s spcial train will run cn Limited time and arrive in Indianapolis at S:30 a. m. and regular train leaving, Richmond at same time will run as per time table schedule, arrlring Indianapolis at 9:20 a. m. GOOD RETURNING Al! trains date of sale. Attractions BASE BALL PARKS THEATERS SEE LOCAL AGENT FOK FURTHER INFORMATION.

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Our clock line is the largest and most varied we have ever carried; It ranges from a 75c ALARM CLOCK TO A $25.00 WESTMINSTER CHIME. Make your selection here and get quality and low price combined. If it is an alarm clock, don't forget BIG BEN, the best ever made at any price $2.50.

PALLADIUM WANT ADS BRING RESULTS

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