Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 45, Number 155, 10 May 1920 — Page 5

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THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. MONDAY, MAY 10, 1920.

PAGE FIVE

The Diary of an Engaged Girl By Phyllis Phillips

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I am In Philadelphia. I am enjoy-1 welcome ' us with a grin of delight,

ing a complete rest with some bosom

friends of mine, of which there are no finer. Arrived her last night, and was met by some half dozen of them at the station. It gave me a thrill to realize that I meant so much to these pals of mine, and the first thing we did was to have a reunion dinner at Green's. You see, I put in six months study at The Academy two years ago and made many friends. Since then some of them have drifted to Europe or to New York, while others have been content to keep the Home Art burning, so to speak. There was my precious Margot with her dark hair and bonny blue eyes, smiling up at me, when the train pulled In Just as If I had never left the old "city at all. Greeny was next, dancing about Impetuously as ever, despite the fact that she has acquired a husband and young daughter since

the long ago days. Nina, with her

wild, red mop of hair, and many new secrets bubbling on her lips (which I construed long before she confided them to me). One old beau has de

serted or been deserted, and one or

two new oneB been annexed. She is

as adorably fickle, that little person,

as she is beautiful.

Such a to-do when I appeared, and

such laughter and kissing. "Why, I felt like a princess returning to her subjects after a two weeks' vacation. In

stinctively, after the first greetings we

fell Into student steps down Chestnut street and very shortly found ourselves grinning up reminiscently at Green's restaurant. Now no one who has not lived through the wonderful days that we have will understand Just what that meant to us. Green's used to be our old hand-out. When in trouble, doubt or Joy, we invariably turned our 6teps to that kindly hostelry, and whispered or shouted our tidings at each other, as the case demanded. We have made history there, some of us. Thre was the same head waiter to

and many of the very same waiters

Place hadn't changed a bit. nor tne prices, as far as I could Bee. We even went to our old table up near the center of the room. It was perfect.

Then tongues wagged furiously for

half an hour in fact until an overindulgent darkey finally lost his patience and thrust a menu card under

my nose suggestively. Such a feed as we had, such merriment! We discussed everyone, present and absent, and I heard of the doings of all the girls who had once shared their lives with me. Once or twice during the evening our faces clouded at the mention of one or two of the old crowd who had "passed beyond," or when the mention of some name brought with it the memory of lost hopes, and of friends who once had graced our classes and were now far away, physically and spiritually. Cornelia was one of these for whom we sighed. She, dear child, is comfortably established in the hills of California, raising prunes and- a family, from last reports. And to think that two Bhort years ago 6he was of us,

gloriously so, and a stern decryer of

the word matrimony! Well, it Just

goes to prove that nothing is permanent save change. Is it not so? Cornelia married a most conservative Britisher, who lured her with his music and almost as soon as the

honeymoon was over decided that there was nothing that suited Cornee so well as the role of wife and mother. Hence the little bungalow in the Santa Clara valley, Budgelets (that's the son and heir), and the prune farm. Well, good luck to them. (To be continued.)

Heart Problems

passion for self-defacement, in coating her nose with pearl powder, tinting her cheeks with pink, and performing miracles with her hair. But, poor Man has only one way of varying the monotony of the vision which greets him in the mirror, every morning he sighs for a little variety. And there are fifty-seven varieties of mustaches red. blonde, long, short, curly, straight, clipped, waxed, dyed! But the only vital difference in them is that some are a little worse than others! All of them are uncivilized, unsani

tary, unnecessary, unbecoming and

ruost poignant unkissable! And now that this worst of the horrors of war has been started, where will it end? Profiteers shall in time

pass away, and Bolshevists shall be no more; strikes may be broken but a

man's habits, never!

Start him in any direction, and he'll keep right on going, until he reaches the limit. Let him coquette with this

liny, cute, little "London Johnny"

mustache, and It won't be two y?ars

before he will have passed through all

the stages of the waxed Kaiser-monstrosity, the French beard, and the imperial, to the ultimate affliction Dowie whiskers! And then, WHAT will a girl have to fall in love with? And to kiss? For a kiss without a mustache MAY be like "an egg without salt" But a kiss under one. MUST be like caressing a whisk-broom.

Little did we think, when we kissed you and sent you "over there" to fight for an ideal. Beloved, that you would come back bringing a MUSTACHE! Verily, verily, the mustache-cup containeth Love's hemlock!

martyrdom in the persecution of Dio

cletian. The great Christian poet

Prudentius has written of the Child's

beautiful faith and cruel suffering and

spread iusr fames throughout Europe. 1 he Russians call her Jevlalija and the Serbians, Evlalija or Lelica. Another virgin martyr called EulaHe died at Barcelona. Her relics spread into Guienne and Languedoc and nampH fha villages nt Rtf Aulazie and

Ste. Aulaire. Both Eulalia, and Eulalic j (

are used interchangeably in France and Spain. Eulalia is frequent In Eng

land, appearing in very early times in ;

church registries in Devon and Cornwall. Eulalie's talismanic gem is the agate.

If worn by her as an amulet, it will protect her from danger and give her , courage and energy. It promises her ' a pleasant disposition and the gift of

persuasion by which she will always attain her heart's desire. Tuesday is her lucky day and 2 her lucky number. The wild rose is her flower.

THREE ARE KILLED IN ACCIDENT AT MARION MARION, Ind., May 10.- Three persona were killed instantly, one mile north of this city, at 9:30 o'clock this morning, when their automobile was struck at a crossing by a southbound car on the Union Traction line. The todies were hurled for some distance and the wrecked machine was carried far down the track. - Injuries to the

head and chest of each caused instant death. The dead are: Miss Jessie Knee, 45 years old, Tipton, Ind. Miss Martha Belle Porter, 14, Tiptorn' Mary E. Weaver, widow, 73, Andrews, Huntington county.

In London there are more than 500

shops that sell nothing but fried fish

IF MOTHERS ONLY KNEW During tries days how many children are complaining of headache, feverIshness, stomach troubles and Irregular bowels. If mothers only knew what Mother Gray's Sweet Powders would do for their children no family would ever be without them. Theo powders are so easy and so effective In their action that mothers who once use them always tell other mothers about them. Sold by druggists everywhere. Advertisement.

What's in a Name

(Copyright)

Dear Mrs. Thompson: I am a lonely Sirl of 19. I have no mother and stay fit home with my father. Father treats me fine until I go out of an evening md then he gets very angry and some

times uses vulgar language. I am a decent, respectable girl and 4-m well thought of by my friends. I nm Just heart-broken the way I am treated. I do all of the housework and everything Just as a mother would and try to be as kind to the children a3 I can. Sometimes I feel like leaving, as I don't feel like doing all of the work and seeing no pleasure. Would It be wrong to leave home? LONESOME. At your age it would not be wrong to leave home, but it would be better to stay and be a mother to the children. For their sake put up with your father's anger. You axe old enough to go places evenings and should continue to do so regardless of his objections. For your own self-respect you do not want to go to undesirable places or with undesirable people. It

is quite unreasonable that you should ' work all the time and not have pleas-! ures which are due a girl of nine-1 teen. ! Dear Mrs. Thompson: I am a girl 14 j years old and have Just come to this I

city to make it my home. Please tell me how to get acquainted with some r.ice girl friends. I have always had a lot of friends, and respected friends, too. I wouldn't care to meet any fast girls. TOUR FRIEND. Go to church. If you tell the minister thai you are a stranger he will help you to meet young people. Friends cannot be made over night. Gradually you will become acquainted and will find some you like better than others.

As a Woman Thinketh By Helen Rowland

V : (Copyright, 1920. by The Wheeler Syndicavt. Ino ) Have you seen them sprouting, bud

ding, blossoming, all 'around you? No, I don't mean the crocuses! I mean those saucy, flippant, little mustaches, that have broken out like a spring fever all over the faces of beautiful American manhood!

Oh Buddie, how COULD you start it? Oh Adonis-of-the-movies, how

CAN you? Oh, Gibson Man, and Sparrow-cellar Boy,- stop it! Of all the evils that followed in the trail of the War, there has been none more blighting than this! There is a reason for everything under the sun except a mustache! Yet, nothing so fascinates a man as ihe sight of hair on his face Heaven knows why! Watching the radishes shoot up in his garden may be enthralling But feeling his upper lip every morning, to see if a thirty-second of an inch has been added to the foilage there over night, is thrilling. It isn't so much that he wants a mustache, as that he wants to prove he COULD grow one, if he cared to! There is some strange, morbid, savage instinct implanted in the masculine breast, that inspires a man to do stunts with his face. A woman takes out her primative

as it is ! Spanish

EULALIE Though Eulalie. or Eulalia sometimes preferred, has a

ennn as well as pronunciation, the name has come to be used as purely

American, fernans no orner name i has a more beautiful or pathetic hie- j tory. It means "fair speach" and ' comes from the Greek term for that r-hrase. j The first Eulalia known to history I was a child of twelve, who possessed ' such extreme of Spanish piety that !

?he escaped from her parents' guardianship and entered Merida. proclaini;rer horlf n Phriisipn tn( pndurine

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BILIOUS! Quick! Get Liver and Bowels Right with "Cascarets"

Furred Tongue, Bad Taste, Indigestion, Sallow Skin, and Miserable Headaches come from a torpid liver and sluggish bowels, which cause the stomach to become filled with undigested food, which sours and ferments, forming acids, gases and poisons. Cascarets tonight will give your bilious liver and constipated bowels a thorough cleansing and straighten you out by morning.

Cascarets never sicken or inconven

ience you like nasty Calomel, Salts, Oil, or griping Pills. They work while you sleep. Advertisement.

TOO WEAK TO DO ANYTHING

A Serious Feminine Illness Rem-1 edied By Lydia E. Pinkham's j Vegetable Compound. Casco, Wis. "After the birth of each of my children I had displacement and

was so w e a k x couldn't do anything. I found a book about Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound so thought I would try it, and after taking it I soon felt better. That was fifteen years ago and I have felt well ever since except that I had a sliarht attack

of the trouble some time ago and took some more of your Compound and was soon all right again. I always recommend your medicine and you may publish my testimonial for the benefit of other women." Mrs. Jcijss Bebo, Jr., R. 1, Box 99, Casco, Wis. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, made from native roots and herbs, contains no narcotic or harmful drugs, and today holds the record of being the

most successful remedy for female ills

n this country, and thousands of vol untary testimonials prove this fact.

If you have the slightest doubt that

Lydia Pinkham's vegetable Comnound will help you, write to Lvdia E,

Pinkham Medicine Co. (confidential), Lynn. Mass., for advice. Your letter will be opened, read and answered by a

MAKES FOOD TASTE

GoodHood's Sarsaparilla Creates an Appetite. Aids digestion and promotes assimilation so that the body secures full nutritive value, thus naturally making the weak strong and giving the vitality of health. This great medicine enables the digestive organs to perform their functions easily, keeps the stomach sweet and relieves or prevents indigestion and other digestive troubles. When your food does taste good it is a sign of good or returning health; shows that the blood is becoming richer, routing scrofula, eczema, rheumatism and other diseases, and that the system is being built up to overcome that tired feeling, and the prostration after influenza and fevers. The one medicine that can legitimately claim to do all this is Hood's Sarsaparilla. If a mild laxative is needed, take Hood's Pills; an active cathartic, more Hood's Pills Advertisement.

P

1 J Shoulders

fc- All Baking

i Cares

When CALUMET

S ArMflo Sfi oil Votrirr

troubles take quick leave. You co right

ahead and mix up baking materials, for biscuits-

cakes anything without fear of uncertainty. Calumet makes

you forget failure. CALUMET BAKING POWDER

Is the most popular because it does give most terfect results. It haa the dib-

gest demand because it is the most do

pendcble. The fact that it ts the bisvfit seller croves that it is the best.

Atrial will convince you that there is

none "just as Rood. Buyacan if you

are not satistied take it Dacs and

get your money tack.

Calumet contains only such ingredients as have been approved

officially cy the u. . i-ooa

Authorities. Ton mt6 wlea yon bey it.

Too mto when job ue iU

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RICHMOND'S DAYLIGHT STORE

2.804

Here You will Find Just the Dress for Daughter

To the mother who has a girl between the ages of 12 and 19, this special showing will be very interesting especially if she wants to get her money's worth in a garment.

HIGHEST QUALITY HIGHEST AWARDS

No mistake can be made in choosing here because we sell "CADILLAC" Dresses, which are by far the best in style, quality and value that can be had.

(facJ Styf .2812

There are plenty of the newest and smartest styles made from fast color ginghams in the prettiest patterns and colors you've ever seen. They are priced at

5. 98, H. 98, $8. 98 up to $15. 00

We know you will be pleased with a "CADILLAC" Dress for daughter. They are the choicest and most dependable garments that can be had.

Another Carload V0$S ELECTRIC and POWER

Washing Machines

On Hand Prompt Delivery

Machines of the Voss make have been in use in Richmond for over six years and are giving satisfaction in every respect. Voss Bros, have manufactured washsrs for over forty years and their tubs are the best on the market today.

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RAISE EVERY CHICK

imiijiiUMHHminiiiuimmum;jiumiunmiij

For the first two days feed your newly hatched chicks nothing but dry bread crumbs then, feed them ii CHICK FEED ii and you will have fewer losses and your chicks will

grow faster be healthy and thrilty. t UL-O-PEP CHICK FEED is manufactured by The Quaker Oats Co. it is the product of their poultry feed experts the greatest in the world therefore the safest feed to buy and use. Its ingredients are Oatmeal a. variety of cracked grains and fish scraps just the thing for the delicate digestive organs of the Little chicks. OMER G. WHELAN

"The Feed Man" 31-33 South 6th Street Phone 1679

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WESTINGHOUSE and GENERAL ELECTRIC MOTORS

Va

HORSE POWER

WOOD OR METAL TUBS

VACUUM, DOLLY, DISC, CYLINDER and OSCILLATING TYPES

I $80 to $150

VOSS PLATFORM TYPE Self-Draining Tubs

Factory representative here this week

Open Every Evening

PARTIAL LIST OF USERS

Frank Quigley Elizabeth M. Williams Grace D. Landwehr Walter Lohse Clarence L. Tillson Walter Hawekotte Roy Wiggans Louis F. Duning Chester G. Lohse George Ford Wm. Turner Robert R. Morrey Edward F. Benson C D. Shideler Harry H. Tubesing C. W. Reece Mrs. Maggie Brady Samuel Embry Walter D. Cowgill Albert Gossett

Chris Fulle Herman H. New-land Bert Overman Mrs. Wiggins Hubert MeClellan Lee L. Ramsey Wm. W. Wentling Mrs. Elizabeth Lake Henry Farwig Irvin Stegall Albert Bodner Samuel E. CrevistonK. H. Knop Harry T, WHiams C. W. Burkley Wallace Appieton Leona Buening Marion Hippard Ethel Fife Wm. Brown Adam H. Bartel

Miss Anna F. Nolte C. R. Michaelree Harry B. Patti ' W. H. Backmeyer Wm. F. Beckman Charles H. Drifmeyer Ferd W. Drifmeyer Miss Lilia W. Drifmeyer Charles H. Eloff Wm. J. Eloff Roy C. Fry Everett H. Hawekotte H. H. Morris George H. Nolte Charles A. Phelps John W. Phelps Henry H. Pilgrim John E. Ulrich Charles E. Veregge John H. Veregge Carl W. Wlest

Easy Terms

Wm. F. KLUTER, Agent

fss HARMONY jjj

voss Swinging Wringer Type

Gates Half-Sole Tire Station

1134 MAIN STREET

PHONE 1595 v

HARMONY Cylinder Type