Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 45, Number 147, 30 April 1920 — Page 5
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, FRIDAY, APRIL 30, 1920.
PAGE FIVE
The Diary of an Engaged Girl By Phyllis Phillip
After that talk with Cecil I felt i way that made U3 both smile. Once,
aw fully close to him and at dinner to-1 when we were alone. Cecil suddenly
clay I found mother's eye fixed upon me in a way that she has when somewhat puzzled at some new outrage of mine or when she is particularly suspicious. I pretended not to notice it, however, and was perfectly natural all throughout the meal. Mother is really such a dear and such a good mother that it hurts me terribly, sometimes, to feel that she does not and will not understand me. I know that she loves me to death, but she will not make allowances for me nor condone with my wanderings, mental or physical. That's all. Cecil has told me to have it out with Jack. Just like my Aunt Cecilia had it out with Jeftry twelve years ago. And I'm going to, some day very soon. Cecil says to remember that
conditions have changed vastly in the
last few years, that the war has made both men and women more human. He is pretty sure old Jack will come up to the acid test; couldn't do otherwise. He says that any man who went Uirough the- Argonne fight, as Jack did, isn't goinf? to balk at the truth being presented to him by the girl he loves, that's sure! 1 admire Cecil for having all that faith after what he has gone through. It's splendid. If a man can come through, despite all sorts of bitter experiences and disappointments, he is really a man and worth making sacrifices for. I hope that Cecil finds Lis mate, and I just know that he will. We hat and talked happily for some time after dinner, mother flitting in and out of the room in a watchful
pose and friends, gives her courage,
and protects her from all evil, inurs-
day Is her lucky day and 7 her lucKy number.
Heart Problems
Dear Mrs. Thompson: I have been keeping company with a young man Jor over a year. I am a very successlul business woman. 1 love this man dearly, but up to the present time he
lias never approached the subject ofj
marriage, although when we are together he says his thoughts are of
no one else
asked me what sort of a husband 1 thought he would make. And I answered quite truthfully and impulsively, "Oh, a very wonderful one." Then I felt my face grow scarlet and I can't yet explain why. I can't,
and yet I can. I Just know that his
question suddenly made me put my
self in the place of being the girl he loved, his wife, and I wondered (sub
consciously, of course) how it would feel to be loved by and married to Cecil. It made me feel queer somehow. Cecil never seemed to notice my blush, for which I was more than grateful. "I think you would be awfully good to a woman," I explained, " and above all you would be tolerant, and that's what most modern women are seeking in the men they marry today tolerance." "Well, little Lindsey, if you never discover it anywhere else, this Tolerance you so crave, always remember that you know of one place to find it!" And then he looked deep into my eyes and I winked back something that I felt welling up in them,
for no good reason whatsoever, and said nothing. Just looked too. Bue he was very gentle all the rest of the evening. And I felt different and strangely rested, mentally. Jack called up to say he wanted me to go motoring just as early as I could in the morning, but that he would not be over this evening. Barbara, It seems, has to be escorted to some dance. I was just beginning to begin "puzzling" again, after he had 'phoned, when Cecil looked over at me, and said, "Remember, sister, fifty years from now nothing will matter." That is a happy thought, after all. (To be continued.)
What's in a Name (Copyright)
LAVINIA
Lavinia hales from ancient Rome. It
Bachelor Girl Sayings By Helen Rowland
v . ' (Copyright, 1920, By The Wheeler Syndicate, Inc.) The honeymoon is not actually over until that Illuminating moment when a bride decides to exchange her chiffon negligee and pink satin mules for half a dozen bungalow aprons and a pair of flat-heeled house-slippers. A man may look upon the marriage certificate as "just a scrap of paper," but a decree of divorce is an expensive luxury, which he keeps locked away in the 6afety-vault with his Liberty Bonds. You can't make a man believe it, but the most tragic moment of marriage is that in which his wife asks him
how she looks in her new spring hat and he stops to consider! A husband is what's left of a bachelor after the nerve has been extracted 1 and alimony is what's left of a husband after the truth has been extracted. Nothing makes a woman so indignant as to have you agree with her when she tearfully confides to you her real opinion of her husband. This is the magic time of year when a young man's 60ul sings the "Spring Song," his heart throb3 to Lohengrin, and his pulse beats a jazz-tune. "Duds," according to a women, are spring clothes that fail to create a sensation, engagements that fizzle out; weddings that fail to go off, and marriages that end in Reno. The gods must love those little spring romances which blossom in a man's heart. They die so young!
Township Commencement Program Is Announced Program invitations for the 34th annual commencement of the Wayne township public schools, in the Richmond High School auditorium Tues-
aay, May 4. were belne mailed from
me oriice or tne township trustee on Friday. The program includes: , March,- "America" (Remlck), orchestra; "The Banner of Liberty" (W. H. Loomis), children's chorus; invocation, the Rev. L. Ulmer; overture, "Orpheus" (Fischer), orchestra; class address, Oscar E. Kelley, of Terre Haute, Ind.; overture, "Raymond" (Fischer), orchestra; .(a) "The Morn of the Year" (Chas. Gounod), (b) "May, the Maiden (W. H. Loomis), children's chorus; presentation of diplomas, C. O. Williams, county superintendent; Collegian's Original Travesty on Popular Hits, orchestra; benediction, the Rev. L. F. Ulmer. Musical program by the Collegians; Harold B. Williams, manager. School
cuorus; urace u. stegall, director. General Rehearsal Is Held For "Posie Shoppe" Comedy The first general rehearsal for '"The Posie Shoppe". to be given in the Washington on May 10 and 11, was held In the Knights of Columbus assembly hall Thursday night. Miss Edna Moorehead directed the speaking and dancing parts while Miss Vivian Brown had charge of the vocal parts. Plans are that rehearsals will be held Friday night and every night of next week except Saturday and Sunday nights. Only 10 days remain in which to have the play working smoothly.
$5 A DAY FOR MEALS TOO MUCH, SAYS AUDITOR (By Associated Press) COLUMBUS, Ohio, April 30. Regardless of the high cost of lMng. $4.50 to $5.50 per day for meala Is too much for even a judge to pay, State Auditor Donahay howled tody in disapproving expense account! of
two Cleveland appellate judges, rne accounts were presented by Jucges Willis Vickery and T. F. Dunlap as part of their expenses while holdng court in Akron.
Aid Society Opposes Showing of "Birth" Here The Ladies' Aid Society of South Eighth Street Friends church, in a meeting Thursday, voiced its opposition to "Birth," a film to be shown
here at the Richmond.
Good Evening By Roy K. Moulton
OVERALL ITEMS If all the rest of us wear overalls to protect against the high cost of clothing the people who are really entitled to wear them will have to go on the job in dress suits just to prove
Killed 2 Women; Married 20 (By Associated Press) LOS ANGELES, Cal., April 30. At least two of the numerous women
i James R, Hulrt is alleged to have m-r-ried in various parts of the couniy were murdered by him, two othys met "accidental" deaths while wuh him and lie "might have murdeifd
more" according to an alleged ccnf?s-: : sion made public today by J. Morgm
Marmaduke, his attorney and ;o-
officials. He is alleged to have married at least 20.
$2,500 Is Bandits' Booty (By Associated Press) COLUMBUS, O.. April 30. Thre armed bandits held up the Union BuiiiV ing and. Savings company in the heart of the down town section, shortly before noon today and escaped witk $2,500 cash. The three men filed into the loan association offices, and whiit two of them held a dozen patrors and the officers at bay, the other secured the loot.
$3,000,000 to Church Drive NEW YORK, April 30. An anonymous gift of $3,000,000 to the United Financial campaign of the Int.erchurch world movement was announced at campaign headquarters here today with the statement that $90,000,000 of the $100,000,000 sought had been pledged. The campaign does not close until next week and more thav 100,000 churches in various states are yet to be heard from.
PRESIDENT HUGHES TURNS DOWN UNIVERSITY JOfl OXFORD, O.. April 30. It wa learned yesterday that Dr. Raymond M. Hughes, president of Miami university on Wednesday turned down the
presidency of the University of Kan-'
sas. Several days ago President Hughes received a telegram front Lawrence, Kas., asking him whether he would consider an offer of the
presidency of the Kansas institution I
He emphatically aecimea ine oner, notwithstanding that it would paydouble the salary he is receiving ac Miami.
in v. ni.4'iS a name nanriutori n-ttVi -l4 Italian
sl.ouM I continue my work? I am y mnn -or 1-auurn . It Is ,-". -r V,,I ,
.. 4 .1 -.4i t.i r : : 1 1 np MPVOn Tn nn t hn Faivi ninn 11 - , " --"o -----
uiuiii;ii n ltd ljiitiuuitxi MdlHl" - - . - v v m 1 1. vi inc.
Latinus with the
their overalls. After that, life will
y
or
linacu
ing. I think the world and all of this Roman name PontLm.in n.l .- mfln . i . fll.1T! LrJ fl t fl ' ' V
very handsome and a stylish dresser, , The first Lavinia was a mythical hom notnmS for us1 uften wonder if lie would tire of , parsonage imitated by the moderns,! INTERESTING LOCAL NEWS me since I do not believe in elaborate i 1 ough not by the Romans themselves. "Those who were reported married clot lies. BROWN-EYED SUSAN. ! She was the daughter of King Latinus, and crippled last week are on the The youns man's financial standing according to Livy and Virgil, and the I mend." Pocatello (Ida.) Tribune, should settle your problem. Perhaps last wife of Aeneas, in whose right he i of course, the overalls for the ladies he does not make enough money to obtained a footing in Italy. will have to be not more than kne? support a wife, in which case it would Niebuhr denied her existence, claim- length. We may expect to see the not be wise for you to marry him. It ing that she was merely a personifica-j latest overall styles direct from Paris is a great pity that the high cost of t'tm 0f the Latin territory. However, j as soon as the first boat gets in. living makes it utterly impossible for that may be. the classical Italians of! A LIVELY DEAD ONE many hundreds of young people to ihe Cinque-Cento revived Lavinia and; "The dead man ran about forty feet marry. If he is in a position to marry ; bestowed her name upon their daugh- j before he fell, but still retained a grip
and it jou love him, I would advise iters. j on tne revolver. When the detectives
The name reached England through reached his side they found it neces-
uterary and religious channels, when ! sary to remove the gun, which he coni Thomson contrived to recommend the ! tinued to flourish while asking that
Book of Ruth to the taste of the ; they hurry an ambulance." Toledo Eighteenth century by translating the Times.
British Join the Turk Forces CONSTANTINOPLE, April 30. British troops, it is believed, plan to support the Sultan's forces in the movement against Turkish nationalists in Asia Minor and even join in an aggressive offensive against Mustapha Kemal.
YOUNG WOMAN SENTENCED 15 YEARS FOR ESPIONAGE NEW YORK , April 30. Mollie Steimer, 20 years old, convicted of violating the espionage act, will begin serving a sentence of 15 years in the Jefferson City, Mo., prison Satur-dav.
Clem Thistlethwaite's. Richmond. Ind.
Em
tim JJ miva KenltVT-
jflfpy use Calumet It vwft pp? stands highest inI f xkml uniformity and leav- 1m.
mil ening strength. There "t
ml is no more chance for ff 1 CALUMET ! j BAKING POWDER to fail than there is for sugar -I oftosweeten.Thatsonereason ! It 1 why there's more Calumet sold than i any other brand on earth. Another A -$ reason i because it's absolutely pura ia Ik the can and in tha bnkiniz. And st.ll aiw ',31 olh'r reason it's the most economical f S to bay and to cse moderata in cost, I goes farther and prevent bake-day 'SStt Gi waste, JZt'rrvrra-oiiwhjrgouahouid f-?3 1 order Q can on trial today. I S You aao when you buy it yon f 5sSB I 'is sve whea yu a t3os3 i!sSl. Calumet contain only snch fesgSS 1 .'.K? ingrredienta as hare been ap?;"Si proved offlnally by tnU.O. g -,aiRi
3204
A COMFORTABLE POPULAR STYLE Pattern 3204, cut in 7 Sizes: 34, 36,
38. 40,. 42, 44 and 46 inches bust measure, is portrayed in this model. Size
8 will require 8 yards of 24 inch
material. The wirth of the dress at the foot, with plaits extended, is 2V4 yards.
Gingham, percale, seersucker, cham-
brey, linen, saYeen and flannelletta
may be used for this style. The sleeve in wrist length, may be finished with a closing so that it may be rolled or turned up.
A pattern of this illustration mailed
to any address on receipt of 10 cents in silver or stamps.
Name
Address
City
Size
Address Pattern Department, Palladium. Patterns will be mailed to your address within one week.
you to give up your business career!
for home life. Dear Mrs. Thompson: I read some-
wnere several years ago that wiiere: people were visiting friends or stop-
ping in a private home, just for one Moabitess into "the lovely young La
meal, that the visiting parties wereivinia." In this manner, Lavinia benot required to fold their napkins came a favorite and her popularity when leaving tho table. But if the spread overseas until she became one visitors were going to remain several of the oldest and most, popular names days they should fold their napkins in colonial America. Now she has beevery time they leave the table, j come one of the legion of quaint oldPlease advise me if this information j fashioned names, exhaling the fragis correst. A HUSBAND. range of lavender. The information stated above isj The sapphire is Livinia's talismanlc correct. I stone. It promises her fidelity of pur-
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