Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 45, Number 209, 12 July 1920 — Page 5
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TJSLEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND., MONDAY, JULY 12, 1920.
PAGE FIVE
The Diary of an Engaged Girl By Phyllis Phillips
July 13 Had luncheon at the Greenwich Village Inn today. Have been hearing bo much about that particular place so finally I asked Jack to take me there. It's too interesting for words, really. All the artists and writers of New fork's Latin quarter, as the village is called, come here to eat or sit around and talk, and no one bothers them sure enough. I Imagine It Is something like the places that 1 have read about in Paris. Anyhow, it gave me a real thrill to be sitting there at last. While we were eating, "Paris," that good-looking young man that we met at the Greenwich Village ball, walked in and spied me immediately. lie bowed and grinned over in a frank
I Heart Problems -J Dear Mrs. Thompson:' I hav lived two years on a farm where a woman has hard work all the time. I have three children and my health is very ponr. My -ork is a dras: and when I dn work in the pardon for an hour or two It takes all my strensrth and leaves me so weak that I am afraid there are times wien my interest In my children is not as -strong s a mother would have it. I love them chore ever;-;h;-'g else in the wer'.d. My husband is very irritable and take3 no interest in the home affairs. He conies in swearing about this or that until It almost takes all the heart out of me. I have thought of going back to the east to my parents for a while to see if he would appreciate his family more when he knows what it is to be away from home. I want to keep my little ones together and yet I feel that I can't go on this way much longer. What would you advise me to do? NITA I would advise yon to go to the homo of your parents for a visit and n rest. The trip would give you new life and a clearer idea of how to handle matters on the farm when you you hare worked so hard that your husband has learned to think that nothing is too much for you to do. He lets you take care of the home and children and do gardening as well. You make a great mistake in doing more than your strength will allow. Your efforts are not appreciated. If you said you could not do things and let them slide long enough he would see that you had to get some one to help you. As a rule, the reason why a person does not accomplish her purpose is because she does not stick to it long enough and simply waits for results. Probably you would decide not to work the garden, but the fast growing weeds would get the better of you and you would pull them up so that the crops would not be spoiled. It would be much better, however, to let the crops spoil and to teach your huband some re.ponslbl!ltr for them. Yes, go home and rest. While you are away your husband will have a chance to see how badly things go at home when the mistress is away. Dear Mrs. Thompson: I read your advice to others. I would like your advice. I am a married woman. My husband and I Just can't agree. It seems the more I do to help him and make him happy the worse he treats me. He is so quick tempered, that when he gets mad he breaks up all kinds of dishes and anything that he gets his hands on. It takes so much of his money to buy things he break!, And he is so cruel to me. He Just
gets mad and doesn't care. We haven't saved anything and he gets so much pay. He spends until there is nothing left to get much of anything. I would like to know what to do. I love him and would hate to lose him. But he treats me so cruelly that 1 will have to do something. Would you leave him and get a divorce? I have tried so many times to stick to him but I can't stand it much longer. LONELY WIFE. Dear Lonely Wife: Your dilemma is a very serious one Indeed. There ia no excuse of course, for your bushand's uncontrollable temper. I take It that he must be good to you at times when he can control his temper, "because you say you still love him. You should tell him frankly that his temper is ruining your life. If you tell your husband that you and the oabv will have to leave him if he docs not control his temper, he may come to his senses. If after you have warned him, he does not maxe any effort to control himself, you will be Justified in leaving him. If you have some place to go to, if your parents are living and want you to come to them, it might be well for you to leave him for a while, telling him just Why you are leaving, and that you will not come back until he learns to control his temper. If he loves you ami the baby, your absence will bring him a sharp realization of his faults. You owe it to your baby to avoid a divorce as long as there is a chance of vour husband reforming.
To Overcome Redness, Tan, Freckles, Blotches
way, and 1 did wish that he would come over and sit with us. After all, these people do interest me very much and they are all so new to me. When I wasn't talking to Jack or watching the fascinating and hungry "Paris," I was staring around the place, taking in every detail. You see Laura has been there with Morgan, and described it to me, so I wanted to see for myself It is different. Very lalssez-falrey (which means when translated that It is do-as-you-pleaslsh). Hence its popularity. The tables are bare, and made of rough wood like unto no others. The food is excellent and so is the service. On the walls are paintings and caricatures of various members of Greenwich Village who have risen to fame, or else are particularly approved of by the owners of the inn. One or two good nudes hang in the hallway and Sonia's Cigarettes (very good, by the
way) are advertised by a stunning poster. i Sonia herself walks through the place occasionally. She is fascinating to look at with her short and very wild tfushy hair, flaring out round her pale face, and her startling brown eyes. Then ,too, she always wears the most wonderful and wierd smocks, most of which she makes herself. And she sure does get the rjght combinations of color;;. Dr.iTl!-i; ive the nia?t of them. What pleased me most wa3 the Independence of her feet, bare and be-sandaled. , How I envied her! At about one-thirty there was a humming in the air, and much laughter, which heralded the descent of about a dozen of the chorus from "The Greenwich Village Follies," now playing at the Village theater. Beautiful girls, some of them, and so full of the old nick. They all had a smile or a pat for "Paris." and one very pretty little thing went up and threw her arms around his neck and kissed him, much to the amusement of the rest, of the crew. "Paris" did not Beem in the least put out, au contraire, he went right on eating his peach melba, stopping only to offer the girl a spoonful! Dear, dear me, how I do love all this free and easyneBS. How I wish I had been brought up in an atmosphere like this. I should have been much happier, I know. No wonder Laura yearns for matrimony, for it will bring her the key to a new paradise and allow her to wander about as freely as any of these people down here. Jack seemed to enjoy himself in his quiet way, and he was most interested in seeing just how much I was carried away by all of the anticB going on about us. Well, I'm glad that he realizes that no matter what happens, at heart I am and always will be a true Bohemian. (To be continued.)
beauty and womanly characteristics, it!
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The first Carlota was Carlota of Savoy, who married Louis XI and brought the name into the royal house of France. The wife of Ceeare Borgia was called Carlota. This unfortunate lady had one daughter who married into the house of La Tremouille. Through Lady Derby the name was carried into England, where it appeared in the 17th century as Charlet. The heiress of the house of Bouillon who was called Carola who was married in 158S, took the name into Germany and it was brought back to England in various forms by the Queen of George III. Coral is Carlota's talismanic gem. It will protect her from storms, 'guard her from danger in traveling and preserve her good health. Tuesday is her lucky day and 5 her lucky number, essentially feminine in its appeal and
American Legion
v , t Twenty-one news posts and new units of the women's auxiliary of the American Legion were chartered during th week ending yesterday, it was announced at the legion national headquarters. Indiana gained one post and cne auxiliary unit during the week and now has 299 posts and 42 units. This week's gain raises the total number of legion organizations to 9,544 posts pd 1,113 auxiliary units. Tbo American Legion now has a total enrollment of more than 2,500,000 with posts in all parts of the United States and in Alaska, Hawaii, Panama the Philippines, Mexico, Argentine republic, England, Canada, China, Cuba, France, Poland and Santo Domingo, while applications for a charter from a post in Porto Rico is reported enroute to legion national headquarters.
TFusler to Teach at Earlham
Professor Carl II. Fusler, Ph. D., of the University of Pennsylvania, has been secured to head the department of physics at Earlham college. He is a graduate of Indiana university, and .has been a member of the faculty at Pennsylvania for 10 years.
HISTORY FOR ANDERSON ANDERSON, Ind., July 12. The discovery by Clarence Stephens of this city of an inscription on a monument in a Moravian cemetery near Hope, Bartholomew county, reading, "John Henry Kluge, first white child born in Indiana, was born at Indian Mission on White river at Anderson, Ind.," has aroused considerable interest among local historians.
AVIATOR BREAKS ARM GREENVILLE, Ohio. July 12 Sherman Altick, aviator of this city, sustained a broken arm and minor bruises at Brookville when his aeroplane crashed through a tree and the propellor embedded itself in the ground. Altick had just started his ascent and it is said was not making sufficient speed to continue going higher. The plane dove head foremost through the tree.
"TAKES BACK" MURDER TALE PHILADELPHIA, Pa., July 12 "Jack" Welch, who was arrested after his wife told the police that he was Implicated ' the death of a man in New York, was discharged. She admitted the murder tale was "all wrong."
Have you tried a bottle of the New Cook's (bldblume? It ? the ted thing You'll say so
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What's in a Name (Copyright)
CARLOTTA. Carlotta has the distinction of being one of the few feminine names which appear in their modern form very early in history and are not the product of a lengthy evolution. This name is the feminine of Charles, one of the most popular masculine names known to history. Carlota signifies "man,'" and tho It is
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If your skin is unduly reddened, tanned or freckled, just dab a little pure mercolized wax on the face and allow it to remain over night. When you wash off the wax in the morning, fine, flaky, almost invisible particles nf outlrln crime with it. Repeating
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Protection Once your house is properly painted, it is insured against decay.
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wbNDERFElSk I Men's Suit from $20.00 to Dr. J. A. Thompson $3.50 cwt. $65.00 at the Dentist OMER G. WH ELAN TIT 17 TTXT?KI Murray Theater Building The Feed Man 1 Kit WilLIl Hours: 912, 1-5, 7-8; Sunday 9-12 Phone 1679 31-33 S. 6th St. 712 Main St. Phone 2930
