Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 45, Number 128, 9 April 1920 — Page 5
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THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. FRIDAY, APRIL 9, 1920.
PAGE FIVE
The Diary of an Engaged Girl By Phyllto Phillips
Woe is me, the spell is broken. 1 am once more furiously detached, and back to normal, as far as my affections are ' concerned. Something told me that it was not in the nature of Lindsey to be a slave to passion for very long. And yesterday I once more raw Jack through the cool eyes of a future wife; that is, I saw him as he is, with no furblshings. Of course he is nice and all that, but I have gotten a grip on my emotions again, and am all for being free as the wind. I suppose It's quite natural, for three days of unbroken devotion, like three days of almost anything else, is apt to
pall. Hence my changed spirits. It was good to see my studio again, which I did this afternoon, without interruption. I enjoyed myBelf painting a still life just as a sort of calmer. And it's a plppen. At four o'clock Jean called up, and asked in a reproachful voice where I had been hiding for so long. I answered lightly enough that I had been enveloped in one of my moods for several days, hence my disappearance. It was a bit rough on Jack to be catalogued as a "mood," but there was nothing else to say at the moment. Jean lolled over to see me half an hour later, and to my astonishment announced that she, too, was a victim of Cupid. Imagine my feelings at these words, if you can. Jean, of all people. Of course, like most of those "self-sufficient" women, she has fallen harder than any of us. Nay, truth to tell, my dear old Jean is positively abject in her love. She glories in it, very much as the mid-Victorian ladie3 so despised by her were wont to do. There you are.
Strange to say, the object of her affections is a cut and dried business
man, a lawyer, but as she assures me. a poet In lawyer's clothing.
It's good to see that there are other girls who wrap the men of their hearts
In cloaks of mystery. I had thought
that I stood alone in this. Jean hates the thought of having to tell the story
of her love to Dorry. You see they have been inseparable for so long that it will be a knock-out-blow. I find that
most friendships suffer when Love
comes along. Take myself, for in
stance. I have been so terribly monopolized by Jack since I became engaged that it has been difficult for me
to see my best friends. I don t like
It at all.
That amazing girl then told me that although she loved Harvey (that
Is his name, Harvey Russell), she felt sure that she could never marry him no, never. It was against all her principles. (Just as If principles have any more to do with the case than than well, trousseaus, let us say.) It was then my turn to give advice, and I did ad lib. The same being the very last thing that a woman in love ever wants to have handed her, as I discovered. How Jean did carry on. She has been swept off her feet by this new emotion and I am a bit worried, for she is not by any means as calm and sensible where her affections are conctrt( T am Shp 's ant to mukp
an awful mess of things. And her Harvey was probably engrossed in some legal document, dry as dust, or in a good beefsteaf, at the very moment that she was confiding her soul throbs to me. Ah, I know men and their dual natures. So will she shortly, I'm thinking. If one can still care for them after the discovery then one really loves. Women just must have complicated thoughts on all subjects. Even their love affairs must have a twist, somewhere, to give them that perfect thrill. It's very feminine. (To be continued.)
20 to go to the show at night unescort. ed by young men?
Also, should a girl of 18 or 20 go with a young man who keeps company with another girl, if the girl does not go with the other young man? Can a girl of 20 keep her good name and go with a man of 28 who
jhas been married and divorced?
CURIOUS. If girls behave themselves and do rot notice young men, I think it is all right for them to attend the picture show at night. They should return home as soon as the show is over. Unless the young man is engaged to the other girl, it is all right to accept invitations from him.
Heart Problems
Dear Mrs. Thompson: I am 23 years
old and have been married four years. We lived happily for a while, and then
to go out alone. Soon I found that he I translucent gem which is the Bymbol ... .1 : 1. 1 . i ;me - .. :
wao unuMug. jn several umeieui uv.- nf mirltv the world over
What's in a Name
. (Copyright)
PEARL Pearl is undoubtedly a "name of greal price"! Not only is it musical in sound, but It honors the exquisite
Mrs. Solomon Says Being The Confessions of Th Seven-Hundreth Wife. By Helen Rowland
: (Copyright, 1920. by The Wheeler Syndicate, Inc.) My Daughter, a woman without TACT is as a street car with a flat wheel a constant jar upon the nerves.
warning; and he that "droppeth in" before luncheon is as welcome as a thunder-storm at a garden party. As a homely face under blonde hair, as an unbecoming spring hat, or an unflattering face-veil, so is a handsome man WITHOUT sentiment. There Is no real cause for his existence. But a homely man without a sense
of humor is the last straw.
lege Thursday night. Plans are being laid for three week-end trips during the coining semester, and the home concert on May 14. Sleight of hands acts by Wendall Lamb, who studied under a magician in France, readings by Herford Crossman, comedian work by, Glen Harsh-
barger and several violin, clarinet and piano trio numbers by Earl Love,
As a tack in the heel of a dancing ' Crossman and Kent Morse, pianist tor
slipper, as a scientific lecture on a the club, Interpolated the program by
But a man WITH tact Is as a pearl in ; not .njght, as a fog at a picnic, as salt the club which itself won repeated ap-
me oyster, or a. proposal ui marriage j jn tQe coffee, so 18 a man that seekat thirty a rare and refreshing sur- eth to "improve" thee, and "remodel"
prise!
: thee.
For, in his wooing, what man con-1 But a lover that adoreth thee bllnd-
casions he promised to stop it, but he
never kept his promises. I
Now he nags me so that I can t
stand it and he is cross to the baby. He spends money faster than he can make it and gets credit wherever they
will give it to him. Even when he
gets up in the morning he is cross and
he growls until he goes to work. I left him and while I was away he couldn't earn enough for himself. When I went back he didn't have anything except some bills to pay. He is in debt all the time. Please be so good as to help my baby and me. Should I leave him or not? I am a nervous wreck. If I don't do something I shall die. He tells me if I don't like it to go. BROKEN HEARTED. It is hopeless to try to live with such a man. Without a doubt you can get along better if you leave him and find work to support yourself and child. In any of the large cities you would find no difficulty in securing housework
The Persian term for the jewel is Muryarid, meaning "child of light." Their legend of the origin of the pearl, a charming and beautiful fancy, is in accordance with the ancient idea that the oysters, rising to the surface of the water at night opening their shells in adoration, received into their mouths drops of dew, congealed by the moonbeams into the lustrous gem which resembles the moon itself. The pearl has always been associated with purity and sanctity. Pearls were chosen as the jewels to adorn the gates of the Celestial City and the
gem has had countless uses as a symbol in the religion of all countries. Pearl is enormously popular in England. Like Muriel and Molly and Vivian and Sibyl, it may almost be said to be one of the national feminine names. In this counthy it has likewise a wide-spread vogue. We have even gone further and made a
diminutive Pearley, which is popular
sidereth the time, the place, the psychological moment or anything save his own MOOD? Go to! As thrilling as an income tax report, as exhilarating as nearchampagne is a man that talketh golf in the moonlight, "shop" in the conservtory, and sentiment before luncheon!
plause. Several songs by the Earlham Male Quartette, part of the Glee Club,
including Prof. Samuel B. Garton, Cyril Pitts, Paul Edwards and Russell
ly, as a Californian adoreth the Call-1
fornia weather, is sweeter than music on the water. Yea, verily, better far the devotion of. a Cyclops that admireth thee with one eye, than the criticism of an "uplifter", who seeth thy defects with BOTH eyes. Go to. go to. my daughter. A dis-
Thornburg, response.
brought an enthusiastic
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And he that kisseth a damsel at the creet woman is subtle in all her ways.
FIRST opportunity is as one that applaudeth in the middle of the sonata. He breaketh the charm. As a telephone bell that ringeth when thou art in the bathtub, as an ice bill in January, as a tea-gown at a funeral, so is a man that seeketh to dry thy tears with pleasant platitudes and "Oh-cheer-ups" and endeavoreth to dispel thy sorrow with a "funny avoweth that thou are "the most abstory." But he that holdeth thine hand and used little woman in the world" is as anodyne to the soul! As a taxicab window that will not shut in a rainstorm, as a fat man on the aisle seat, as a pin in the back of the collar, so is a man that hearkeneth half-heartedly when thou speakest, and
hasteneth to spring his OWN "joke."
But he that hangeth upon thy words
and applaudeth thy bon mot is as
firelight upon a diamond; he causeth thee to scintillate. As a foot-stool in a dark passage, as a door-bell that awakeneth thee in the middle of the night, as a telegram at dawn, so is a man that calleth without
where you could keep your child with ' in some sections, though a trifle pro
vincial. Pearl's talismanic stone is, of course, her own gem, the pearl. It promises her great charm and affability, and many friends. It will always guard her from dangers and evil and preserve her purity. Thursday is her lucky day and 2 her lucky number. The marguerite or daisy is her flower.
you. When you are given your divorce you will probably be allotted alimony too. It is a question, however, whether you can collect it. I believe it is harmful to a child to be brought up in a home which is made as inharmonious as your husband makes yours. Your, child will be happier away from its father. Dear Mrs. Thompson: Is it wrong for young ladies at the sge of 18 and
Margarine a table delicacy eco--nomical enough to use in cooking. Made from choice cocoanut oil, peanut oil, pasteurized milk and finest dairy salt.
Wg choice cocoanut oil, I k W peanut oil, pasteurized milk and finest dairy j2 It adds a new cream- 3X inesa to your sauces 13"? and an extra richness to LV i your cakes. jR&Jjf ' Order a carton today. Ss p Swift & Company 1 U.S. A. I
3$ I I fluffy,tenderx,gi I I i cakes, biscuits and I I Y j I doughnuts that just i j fc f I keep you hanging I i I . I 'rnnnrl the nsnrrv I I
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But WHAT man knoweth when to be
tender and when to be stern; when to be sympathetic and when to be jealous; when to jest, when to sigh, when to bully, when to beg and when to kiss a woman? For, alas, they are all as motor cars which balk upon a cartrack, run at top speed down hill, and skid upon a precipice. "Perversity" is their middle name and there Is NO subtlety in them. Selah.
Earlh
am
30 YEARS' TOIL BROKE DOWN HEALTH BUT VOLA TONIC KEPT HER ON JOB
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After an extremely successful tour, during which they visited Muncie, Marion, Bluffton and Indianapolis, the Earlham Glee club returned to the col-
For thirty years Mrs. Mary England, 2230 Gilbert Avenue, Cincinnati, O., worked hard as a seamstress and, of course, the work finally hurt her health. "My system all over became weakened "and run down," Mrs. England said. "I got so I was very nervous. My stomach was out of order also and I was troubled with constipation. "I went to the drug store to get something that would build me up and my druggist recommended VolaTonic. I got a bottle of Vola-Tonic
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mond at the five Quigley drug stores.
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"Richmond's Daylight Store" V - t
What is Spring without a
New Suit? "Nothing" answers the fashionable woman and she proceeds to make it "something" by losing no time in visiting this timely and extensive Suit display. Here are Etons and boleros ; ripple effects ; Tuxedo models and Suits semifitted or severely tailored. All the most wanted fabrics and colorings are presented.
SAMPLE SUIT SALE all this week
Regular values to $89.75, for ...
J5975
Dresses
For Saturday Selling Wonderful Assortment
I. : - Richmond's Daylight Store.
TAFFETA GEORGETTE SATINS TRICOTINES WOOL JERSEYS Every Dress in this lot is new and up to the minute in style. Values to $39.75, For Saturday only
$2500
Glorious Mi fj M Birthday "v U ljiffi fj What an opportunity for a mastersry Can't you just feci the joy and supst pressed excitement as the door swings !v Pen the: candle-covered cake
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Valier's Enterprise Flour will prove to be your very best friend that day. It can always be depended upon when extra fine baking is needed. Valier'sv Enterprise Floury is special-milled from none but carefully selected, hard wheat even tho the present scarcity of such gTain adds a high premium to every bushel we buy. The consequent high quality of Valier's Enterprise Flour, makes it slightly trgher priced in the sack. Vet it is economical in the end. It produces better baking and More Loaves Per Sack Phone your grocer today for a sack of Valier's Enterprise Flour
"CommanitT" is Valier's high-grade popular priced! flour. It has made hosts of friends.
Fountain City High School Senior Class Play "Ah Early Bird"
K. of P. Hall, Fountain City, Ind.
Saturday Night, April 10 8:00 p. m. Admission 25c, 50c
ecture
Friday Evening IN THE COLISEUM April 9th.
7:30-8:30
Richmond High School Symphony Orchestra 55 Pieces Only organization of the kind in the United States Direction Prof. Ralph C. Sloane
8:30
Dr. Merton Stacher Rice, of Detroit One of the Greatest Orators in Methodism "AMERICANIZING AMERICA"
ADMISSION ONLY 50c No war tax. Entire receipts will be devoted to defraying expenses of entertaining the Methodist Conference. Seats may be reserved at Grace Church Thursday and Friday.
