Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 45, Number 183, 10 June 1920 — Page 5

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THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND., THURSDAY, JUNE 10, 1920.

The Diary of an Engaged Girl By Phyllis Phillip

M.0FP. TO CONDUCT

MEMORIAL SERVICE

What a moment! Maybe the world can Imagine how I felt as I felt myself falling into the clutches of my Nemesis. Tears came to my eyes, but a gentle squeeze from Cecil made Die come to my senses Just in time. "Why, Llndsey, dear, where on earth were you? I have been waiting and watting for you, and Julia (my cousin) has Just gone home. She despaired of your ' arriving at all. Of course you know how persistent your Aunt Patricia Is. She Just waited, and I am rewarded, as you see." All this time she was gazing first at me, then at Cecil. I had the forethought to Introduce him to her as Mr. Walter Jones, which threw her off the track completely, and I knew would save any Bcandalmonging in my home town, in case aunty wrote home saying that she had caught me at the station gazing into the eyes of a young mo. After all Cecil has been accused of enough crimes, where I am concerned. Mr. Jones explained that he had been on the same train as me and told of the accident to my slipper, which had detained me for so long. Then Aunt Patricia told me that the family motor was waiting without, and piloted me. towards it. I Just had time to whisper fractically to Cecil to be eure and call me up within an hour or two at the house, for I must get away Trom aunty, come what may. He

nodded in reply. It's comforting to know that there Is one person who will never fail you. I almost wish that Cecil were No, I'm not sure of myself as yet so must not put any thoughts into words. We climbed into the family motor end were driven solemnly off to the family mansion in Beacon street. I don't know what it is about the city tof Boston that irritates me so. Maybe it Is the smugness of the life, drawling along everywhere about you, or hiaybe it is the lack of imagination !n the hats of the Boston women. Who knows? The one thing certain is that 2 am always peeved and outraged as Boon as I catch sight of the State House. It is my Welsh-Russian ancestry cropping out, I imagine. Somo of jny ancestors on both sides were very wild people, I have heard. They ought to see Lindsey. Haw they would condemn those of the family who in the lightness of their hearts emigrated to

America, way back in the seventeenseventies. Arrived at the house of the Bullard family, I was embraced in a chilly sort of a way by my cousin Julia, aged fifteen, and a real little prig, if there

ever was one. She looked me over, and reproached me for having kept them waiting at the station and asked me about my fiance, all in one breath. I was Just mean enough not to answer her about the last mentioned article, for I knew that she was fairly bursting with curiosity and that always makes me deliberate and disgusted with my own sex. Aunt Patricia told Julia to Bhow me to my room, and with rebellion in my soul I ascended the massive stairs. Even as the family is, so was the room, and I felt the last of my epirits slump into my slippers. Dear, oh, dear, how can real human beings hang snuff colored curtains at windows, and fill the rest of a room with drabs and browns and such like? I could have cried as I looked about me I felt that I should have most terrible dreams in such an atmosphere and then to think of one whole week of same. Verily it was more than the heart of nineteen could possibly stand. Right there and then I made up my young mind to escape that night, no matter what. If Cecil failed me, why there was always the bold walk-away, and the first or even the milk train home to New York. I should die in this environment. (To be continued.)

POLICE SERGEANT KILLED

ANDERSON, Ind., June 10. Falling from a scaffold on which he was paint

ing his home, Riley E. Bartlow, 57

years old, night desk sergeant of the

Anderson police force for eight years,

was instantly killed when the scaf

fold gave way. Bartlow rolled down a

veranda roof and fell to the ground.

12 feet below, sustaining a broken

neck.

Memorial exercises for departed members will be conducted at 2:30 p. m., Sunday in the lodge room of the

K. of P. building on South Eighth street by members of the lodge and

the Uniform Rank of the Third Regi

ment. Col. Frank Shellhouse, of Indianapolis, and Gen. W. B. Gray and staff.

of Covington, will be present. The

memorial address will be delivered by

the Rev. J. J. Rea of the First Presby

terian church. Preceding the services. Knights of Pythias and the Uniform Rank will hold a parade, leaving the building at 1:30 o'clock. Frank Hicks and others will provide the musical features of the service. The public is invited.

vestigation, 17; prenatal cases, 3; other visits including investigations for the public health clinic at Easthaven, 34. Thirty-four patients were given doctor's care. Dr. M. F. Johnston is chairman of tho public health committee. The report of Will W. Reller, chair

man of the housing and garden committee, showed that 1,344 Richmond children have signed their intention to maintain a garden during the summer. Many of the children are paying for their own seeds, and plants, but some seeds have been given away and others sold at costs. Two and one-half bushels of potatoes have been given away. E. E. Rice, garden supervisor, reported to committee that the gardens he had visited were doing very well. Interest in the gardens is keen, he said.

119 Service Men Assisted

By Social Service Bureau In May, Month-end Report Reports of various committees on

the past month's work made at the

Social Service Board meeting Thursday noon at the Y. M. C. A. Howard A. Dill, president, presided.

One hundred and nineteen exservice men have called at the Red Cross offices or sent members of their family during the month. These men have all been met and their case cared for by Miss Gladys Hartman, acting head of the bureau. Most of the men have asked for compensation or vocatiopal training. In each case an hour or more is needed to file the necessary papers. The sum of $148.00 was given in loans to ex-service men during the month. Ninety visits have been made by the visiting nurse, Miss Bertha King, and Miss Hartman, in the interest of the following types of cases: general nursing, 2S; general investigation, 4; tuberculosis investigation. 2; baby in-

24-HOUR PROTEST STRIKE NOT ENTIRELY SUCCESSFUL THE HAGUE, June 10. Yesterday's 24-hour strike, called by the trade union federations as a protest against

the government's "anti-revolutionary ' bill," was not entirely successful. The j tramways and public services herej and at Amsterdam ran on normal j schedule throughout the day and work was continued at the docks. In some j trades there was a partial cessation:

of operations and many thousands of persons took part in street demonstrations before the Parliament building. Disturbances here were suppressed by the police.

Says His Prescription

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Heart Problems

v ; Dear Mrs. Thompson: I am a young married woman. I married a soldier who went to France. My mother is a widow and so I continued to live with her and when my husband returned he came to our house to live, loo My husband is making a fairly good ealary. but hardly enough to buy furniture, pay rent and live comfortably. We are quite dependent upon mother, although we pay all the expenses for mother. She owns the house and the furniture. Mother and my husband cannot get along. She objects to all the little tilings he does. She will not permit him to smoke in the house, and no matter where he lays the newspaper, it is in the wrong place. Of course I cannot be happy and listen to the constant scolding mother gives my husband. What do you think I ought to do? I don't like to leave mother to live all alone, and besides we have very little money and would find it hard to get along if we lived anywhere else. My husband asked for a raise and the company where he works refused to give it to him. DESPERATE. If you can afford to live somewhere else I would advise you to do so. Probably your mother would bo happier to have her home to herself. You might be able to rent furnished rooms for the time being. Of course you should save in every way possible fro that you can buy furniture of your own. These are trying times for many impulsive young couples who married Impulsively and now find living conditions none too agreeable. Dear Mrs. Thompson: I am 15 jears old and have been invited to attend a picnic with a boy friend. The picnic is about 15 miles from hero nnd we are supposed to go in auto trucks. His lather and mother are poing and they want me to go along. My mother does not know whether I should go or not and she said I

Fhould write you and see what wou think. SUNSHINE. I believe it would be all right for you to go to the picnic since tho boy's parents are going too I so thoroughly approve of young people getting all the fresh air possible that my advico Js to run along to the picnic and have a good time

Required for Jiffy-Jell Desserts They come ready-sweetened. They come acidulated with pure fruit acid, made , from lemons or from grapes. P A bottle of liquid fruit flavor comes in each package. We crush the fruit, condense the juice and seal it in a bottle. So Jiffy-Jell is a real-fruit dainty, rich in fruit. ' Simply add boiling water as directed on package, then the fruit essence from the bottle, and let cool. If you used fresh fruit, plus a lot of sugar, you could make nothing more delicious.

Serves six at trifling cost One package of Jiffy-Jell serves six in mold form, or twelve if you whip the jell. And the fruit alone which we use in it would cost you more than the whole dessert.

Real-Fruit Desserts

What's in a Name

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(Copyright)

Ten Flavors in Glass Vials A bottle like this in each package Mint Lime Cherry Raspberry Loganberry Strawberry Pineapple Orange Lemon Coffee

Be sure to get this package from your grocer, for Jiffy-Jell is the only dessert with these liquid fruit flavors in vials.

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Test it for yourself-

BETTINA Bettina. curiously enough, has no etymological connection with Betty, as Is generally supposed. It is an Italian feminine name which was derived from the old verb beo, to bless, and later, with the word benedico (to epeak welO. Beata and Bettrys were the early forms of the names and in Diocletian's persecutions the Christian maiden who drew the bodies of her martyred brothers from the Tiber and buried

them, afterward sharing their fate, was called Beatrix. Her relics were enshrined at Rome and her fame spread broadcast. Dante further con- j

tributed to the prevalence of the "blessed" names by making the love of his youth. Beatrice Portinari. the theme of his "Vita Nuova" and hU guide through paradise. Bona, another form of the name, ras used by the daughters of tho Counts of Savoy, and in the House of Luxemburg, and came to the throne of Franco with the daughter of Jobann of Luxemburg, the blind king of Bohemia. In Spain, a Vislgothic nun was canonized aa Pnedicta and partly in her honor and party through the fame of the patriach of the western monks, Bened Ictus, her name become the popular and accepted form in the Latin countries. Italy, producing the Benedetta, straightway contracted it to Bettina, a form which England and America adoptod and popularized. Tho ruby is Bettina's talismanic gem. It promises her courage and power and the attainment of wealth. Thursday is her lucky day and 5 her lucky number. The lily is her flower

NEW EDISWB

"Tkt Phtuotrmpk with a SemP' which made New York gasp with astonishment We have an instrument exactly fik the instrument which was used in the remarkable "Dark Scene" Test made March loth, 1920, in Carnegie Hali, New York City, when the New Edison matched Anna Case's voice with a realism that utterly baffled a 8 00 wphisdeated New Yorker. Tot tt power to give yon the actual voice of great artists. Iv us give you the Realism Teat.

HARRISON' EDISON SECTION In the Westcott Pharmacy

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Has Powerful Influence Over Rheumatism Discoverer Tells Druggrsts Not to Take a Cent of Anyone's Money Unless Allenrhu Completely Banishes All 'Rheumatic Pains and Twinges. Mr. James H. Allen suffered for years with rheumatism. Many times this terrible disease left him helpless and unable to work. He finally decided, after years of ceaseless study, that no one can be free from rheumatism until the accumulated impurities, commonly called uric acid deposits, were dissolved in the joints and muscles and expelled from the body. With this idea in mind he consulted physicians, made experiments and finally compounded a prescription that quickly and completely banished every sign and symptom of rheumatism from his system. He freely gave his discovery to others who took it. with what might be called marvelous success. After years of urging he decided to let rut ferers everywhere know about his discovery through the newspapers. Your druggist has been appointed ago,.t for Allenrhu in this vicinity with the understanding that he will freely return the purchase money to all who state they received no benefit. Advertisement.

sleagJe TOQUES

ADAM H. BARTEL CO.

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Rearing the Philco Retaining Wall that makes possible a Two Year Guarantee IT has taken five years to do it five years of the most painstaking scientific research to rear the PHILCO RETAINER. But it was worth it. For the result is the longest, strongest guarantee ever put behind a storage battery for automobile starting, lighting, and ignition. The Philadelphia Diamond Grid Battery without the Philco Retainer was and is a good battery. Not one in a thousand has failed to outlive its long guarantee of eighteen months. But the Philadelphia Diamond Grid Battery with the Philco Retainer is even better. In gruelling tests, it has outlasted and out-performed any other battery we could buy or build. In actual war service in the U. S. Navy, it has demonstrated its supreme practical worth. THE new patented feature, the Philco Retainer, is a thin sheet of slotted hanl rubber, which is placed flat against the active material of each positive plate. In any battery this active material tends to disintegrate and fall ofT. The faster this occurs, the quicker the battery wears out. Altho the slots in the Philco Retainer are so numerous that they allow the free passage of acid and current, each slot is so narrow that the Retainer is, in erTect, a solid wall which holds the active material firmly in place. This means for you at least six months extra battery service secured by a definite guarantee, THE CHENOWETH ELECTRIC SERVICE CO.

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1115 -Main Street Phone 2121

PHILADELPHIA TWMI

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