Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 45, Number 199, 29 June 1920 — Page 5
The Diary of an By PhyMla
July 0 Went to my studio for thejble husband and the father of several 8t time in tnor than a -wppIi tnria v I 1lt1 I lnJuv v, . n 'n ...-
first time In more than a week today My, but b.ut It was good to get back there again. Finished the painting of myself and it looks pretty good to me. Got another canvas ready to start that head of Cecil tomorrow, for he has promised to pose for me. He has such a handsme profile that it will be pleasure to work on it. He seemed awful pleased to help me out. I suspect it is mostly because he knows that by so doing he will be alone with me for an hour or two a day! Just as I was fixing things up the phone rang and no other person than Brixy was on the wire. It seemed ages since I last thrilled to Brlxy's looks of admiration. Can't explain why, but I think that it is because I have had the dark eyes of Cecil and Prince Charming playing tricks with my heart and imagination. Must be that. In other words, I have grown up with a bound! I feel a wee bit sad about this sudden leap into the land of the fully grown-ups, somehow or other. I know that my girlish peace of mind has gone forever. I am a restless young woman and full of knowledge and you know that old saying about a little knowledge being a dangerous thing? My life can never bo the same singsong sort of exlstonce that it was before I kissed other men. I am deeply alivo to my own powors and I nave felt men tremble at my nearness That, la Itself, is dangerous and disturbing. My extreme girlhood seems very far behind mo Just now. I guess that I am what you call awakened! And I've always wondered just what that meant in regard to a woman. Have read about it in all sorts ofbooks and magazines aud been always curious. Now I have experienced for myself. Aunt Cecilia is right, I must go through tuo flame and be burnt, not listen to others. So It was that my old playmate, Brixy, struck me as being a thing of the past, the extreme past, quite a child in fact though very sweet and dear to me. He too saw a change in me, for he said several timee: "Lindy, dear, what have you been doing to yourself. You act so grown-up and different. Why, your very face has changed." But, of course, that was all imagination on bis part. I soon convinced him that to him I was, ftV always would be, the same old L;.d':y, which seemed to cheer him cotV:ierably. And tJ think that not so long ago I was sure that I was madly in love with Brixy. that he fulfilled my every dream of perfect manhood, and that I had even thought of him as a posiWhat' XT s in a IName (Copyright) ADA Ada Is the fortunate possessor of two sources of derivation; likewise she may choose her own significance, since there is considerable conflict in translating the name. Some etymologists take Ada to be an adaptation of the early Biblical name, Adah, meaning ornament, which occurs frequently in Hebrew nomenclature. Others believe that it raelly comes from the Teutonic Oda. which signified rich, or the old Saxon Ide, meaning bappy. In all events, Ada may be aid to find happiness in riches which are exploited by ornaments. The first feminine form corresponding to Ada was Audur, the name bestowed upon a beautiful viking, one of the flrst Iclandic settlers. Auda or Alda named the wife of Orlando, the Paladin. A queen of Italy in 926 was so called, and the name was still in use in 1393 by the feminine members of the House of Este. The Low German form. Ead, came to be translated as Ide and appears as such in the Cambrai register. As Ida, it was bestowed upon the Countess of Boulogne, granddaughter of King Stephen. Ada seems to be purely in English usage, until its adoption in this country. The ruby is Ada's talismanic gem. It is said to fulfil for her its promise of courage and Invulnerability, and to shield her from adverse fortune. Wednesday is her lucky day and 3 het lucky number. JEAN Joan is one of the many French names which have come to be Anglicized by dropping the final ending. Though infinitely prettier when spelled Jeanne, it is apparently thought to savor too much of the Gaelic for English ears. t is one of the simplest feminine names.-- its equivalent, Jane, being thf sole example of an appclative even less burdened with affectation. Jean means 'grace of the Lord." Its earliest, predecessor was Joanna, wife of Herod's steward. The Roman calendar has two feasts in honor of Joanna, ihe holy woman of the Bible, liit the real vogue of the name is due to the numerous St. Johns of the Seripai!-ts, of which Joanna is really tae feminine. In the twelfth century Jehanne and Jeanne appeared In the south of France anu Navarre. The latter was specially a patrician name and its bearer married into many of the royal families cf th times. The daughter of Jlenry n, who married into Sicily, was the first English princess so called The Scottish Joan Beaufort, whom the 8cots called Jeaa, was the maiden beloved by tho captive James I. The sapphire is the talismanic gem belonging to Jean. It is said to attract divine favor for her and protect her from all danger and disease. FrlOuy Is her lucky day and 2 her lucky number. Seasonable Beauty Aid We find you can bring out the Usauty of your hair to its very best advantage by washing it with cauthrox. it makes a very simple, inexpensive haiapoo. which cleanses the hair and :lp thoroughly of all tho dandruff, dirt and excess oil, leaving a wonderfully clean, wfcolosomo feeling. After its 08 you will find that the hair dries quickly sjirl evunly. ls never streaked In appearance and is always bright, oft and fluffy; so Huffy, in fact, that I. looks more abundant than It is. and so soft that arranging It becomes a pleasure. Just use a toaspoonful of tmn'shrox, vhlch you can gut from any irood driggist's, dissolve it in a cup of hot water; this makes a full cun of shampoo liquid, enough so it is easy to ! apply it to all the hair instead of Just the top of the head. 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THE
Engaged Girl Phillips inue uiuaseys (mat was all a year ago before I had decided that no child should enter my life before I was twenty-five years of ago, o course). And it Just goes to show you how often a girl of nineteen changes her mind. So why marry? Brixy and I spent the rest of the afternoon in swapping Jokes, like any two kids. In fact. I find that with him I become a happy, untroubled kiddie, and it's awfully sweet. It also proves that I do not love him not even a teeny weeny bit! How funny, after all my thoughts of a few weeks ago (To be continued.) As a Woman Thinketh By Helen Rowland (Copyright. 1920. by The Wheeler . Syndicate, Inc.) X-RAYING A LOVER. Hurrah and Oh, be joyful! Marriage is no longer a lottery! But a sweet and roseate certainty. The soul-photograph is here at last! Tho perfect X-Ray camera, which will truthfully reproduce your fiance's character, disposition, tastes and emotions. And tells you "before-taking" whether he is a fiasco, a fire-eatei, a Fido, a fibber or a financier. Take bim to Paris and let him be photographed! But just a moment, please! WILL it tell you, I wonder? Just how many times a week he will be willing to shave when your kisses have become a daily duty, instead of a bi-weekly luxury? Will it tell you how far he keeps the windows open in winter, and whether or not you will long to divorce him for "incompatibility of tempeiature"? Will it tell you how often he re peats the same story in an evening, and how many times you will be expected to laugh at his favorite joke? Will it tell you whether he is the kind that will get up and make his own coffee in the morning or the kind that lets one cold muffin and a burnt chop make him act like an early martyr for a week? Will it tell you how hard he Is on his sox, and whether or not he will wipe his safety razor on the embroidered towels? Will it tell you whether or not he sings at his bath, and insists on reading the newspaper aloud at breakfast? Will it tell you whether he hoards old shoes, bottle corks, cigarette coupons, odd bits of string, lead pipe, or "fishing clothes"? Will it tell you whether he is going! to open your letters first, or hand them to you, and then read them chummily over your shoulder? Will it tell you what kind of tobacco he smokes, and how he looks without a collar? Will it tell you whether or not he is going to insist on choosing the wall-paper, selecting the brand of your tooth-powder, and picking out your hats? Will it tell you whether he keeps six collar buttons and one automobile, or six motor cars and onlv one collarbutton? ? ? Will it tell you what sort of things he says when he falls over the furniture in the middle of the night? Will it tell you just how far his mother succeeded in spoiling him, and how often his sister will expect to visit you? Will it tell you whether or not he will fling bis soiled collars behind the piano, under the bed, or into the hamper? Will it tell you whether or not he writes free-verse? Will it tell you whether he is going BOOT C0N ODOROUS FLAT CORN' SWEATING sorr corn SORt huH'ON END YOUR FOOT, MISERY Cal-o-cide positively Cives quick relief and lasuiitt results. It penccrates the tores and removes the cum (Plasters in eac'j package for Stubborn Corns) A'lMri stores. J 5c &!ooCc tMyuc.O&is
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k Are you safeguarding them from possiblc adversity? . jp The sense of responsibility is strongest 1 p- in the saver. Thriftiness prevents shifty ing; it strengthens will and develops i f character. i g No surer way to provide for comfort and I future well-being than to save regularly a part of your earnings. j I We Pay 3 on Savings Second National Bank Capital, Surplus, Undivided Profits I Over $600,000 j wnw mi iw Minim mi iiiwii 1 1 hi m mi 1 1 mn 1 1 n i ff
RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND
PARASOL IS NOVEL
JuUa Faye, actress, ready for an afternoon on the hot bijhU. Hers is one of the most unique parasols of the season. It was carried recently by Miss Julia Faye, a pretty motion picture actress, when she went for a dip in the brir.y deep. It is made of apricot silk with pheasant feathers placed along every rib. A circle of downy feathers at the center and a few of the ends of the pheasant feathers at the end of the handle make it look like some huge but beautiful spider. This particular style m? never become popular, but it Ls at least decorative and arresting.
to grow fat, or bald, or fussy, or flirtatious as the years go on? Of course it won't! For, even though it may tell you exactly what he IS, it can never tell you what he is GOING TO BE! Because every man is a unique chemical combination. Add matrimony, and you never can foretell what he will turn into. And tho only thing of which you can be sure, is that it will be something different! So, perhaps, after all. It's just as safe to pick out. your future mate, by flipping a coin, or counting the buttons on his coat "Eenie-meenie-mine-mo You're it!" As to have him X-Rayed! And Soul-photographed! MR. AND MRS. EVANS DENY RUMOR OF CALIF. MOTOR TRIP Mr. and Mrs. John Evans, of 1223 East Main street, have returned from CompJexti On
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SUM -T KLEGK AAL KICJtiMOND, TUESDAY, JUNE 29,
COSTUME ACCESSOR!
Columbus, O., where they attended the reunion of the Williams family. The reunion was held at the home of C. E. Warres. Mrs. Evans denied Tuesday the ruml or that they were going to motor to California. She said she presumed someone had seen them leaving for Columbus and had jumped to the conclusion they were about to take a lengthy trip. I
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Heart Problems
Dear Mrs. Thompson: I am a young widow of 18. My husband died this year, but I did not love him. I have always loved a man that ls 50, and now we wish to be married. Would it be proper to marry hiru this year or wait until next year? I have no parents. A LONELY WIDOW. You should wait until next year. Dear Mrs. Thompson: I am a girl IS years of age. (1) Which side of the car should the girl sit on when riding in the back seatwith a boy? (2) . If you receive a box of candy from -a boy, should you open while he ls still with you, or after he has gone? (3) Is it proper to go with a boy whom every one thinks is tough but i who acts very decent when he ls with you? PRIMP. (1) When sitting in a seat for two in a street car, the girl should sit on the Inside. It does not matter on which side she sits if the seat is large and designed for several passengers. When the seat runs along the side of the car, a thoughtful man has the woman sit so that she will face the err o -irT nappy vision. Mothers Friend Gives Comfort to -Expectant Mothers By making elastic the muscles, during the anxious months before maternity. Mother's Friend renders the ligaments pliant for expansion as the system is preparing fot the coming event. How; natural then that the new dawn is looked to in happy anticipation. Mother's Friend is used externally. At all Druggists. Special Booklet on Motherhood and Baby free. sWifiaid Regulator Co. Dept. F-6. Atlanta. Ga.
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front of the car. when talking to him. (2) The candy should be opened while he is there. (2) A girl cannot be too careful of her good name. If she goes with a boy who has the reputation of being tough, it will lower her reputation to his level. NATIONAL ELMER S. SMITH . ., THE WHEEL MAN 4ZB Ma,n Phone 1801
An Education in Music
is so easy to acquire today that there is no real excuse for musical ignorance. The player piano rolls bring to the home the composition of old masters properly interpreted. We are listing below;a few of the July Rolls, which are now in stock:
1134 1135 1141 1143 D-63 D-64
Good Old Favorites Medley of favorite songs of bygone days Hawaiian Ereezes..A song of love and longing for dear old Hawaii Railroad Blues A humorous strain of original blues That Old Irish Mother of Mine A pliipiiff Irish melody STORY ROLLS Three Dances from Henry VIII - - The Whispering Wings
You have the advantage of efficient service, coupled with a large stock to select from, when vou trade with us. Starr Piano Go. 931-35 Main Street Richmond, Indiana
Cords; Sooo Ofites 4 Fab
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Bring Your Work In Early, as we close Thursday after, noons during July and August. LACEVS 8EWINO MACHINE STORE 8. 7th. Phone 17S Buttons Gsvsrsd !
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