Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 45, Number 213, 16 July 1920 — Page 5
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. RICHMOND, IND., iT.TDAY, JULY IB, 1920.
PAGE FIVE
The Diary of an Engaged Girl
TELLS NEEDS OF CZECHOSLOVAKIA
By Phyllis Phillips
My first assignment was to go down and get some sketches of the crowds bathing at Coney Island. May I say that no more pleasant Job could have been selected for mo on a mid-July day? Filled with delight I blew out of Dean's office and hied me to the very boat that Jack and I had had such a jolly time on a few days before and yet was it not a century before? Just for luck I sketched some of the funny couples on the boat going down. It gave me something to do, and helped to while away the time. Once arrived at the Island I wandered about wondering just which people to sketch, for they were all eo interesting and amusing. I nearly died when I came across Mr. and Mrs. Pee-Wee (dwarfs from some side ehow or other) enjoying themselves by being whirled about, in the old tubs over the bounding waves that Jack and I had so hilariously sampled. They looked so tiny and were so Jolly as they were tossed this way and that, and the crowd enjoyed It so. Quick as a wink I caught them at their funniest, to my great joy, and then strolled on to see what else there was to see. I felt like an old hand at the game, and yet very new to it. It was won
derful to be really, truly prowling about, unchaperoned, untroubled, and, above all, unknown! There is no more inspiring feeling than that which comes from being able to lose oneself totally. Only artists and dreamers get this, I fear. To be able to lose one's Identity Norn de Chat! What bliss. I roamed thusly for two hours, and by that time had a fair selection of peachy cartoons for Mr. Dean to pick and choose from. And was I tired? Not so as you could notice it. I made a great discovery today .one does not get tired from anything so quickly as from ennui! Doing the work that one loves does not tire one.
not really. While being bored wearies one in mind, body and estate. It got fierce and hot during the afternoon, and I finally went in and had some food and a long, cold drink. Then I sat back, well pleased with my work and my day, and listened to the music and watched the crowds, dancing and perspiring. It is such a simple, sweatty, goodnatured crowd, this one at Coney Island. It manges to squeeze so much fun out of so little. One can learn many great lessons of life by just coming here and being simple, too every once in a while. It will keep one young and wholesome. By six o'clock I was back at the office and submitting my drawings to Mr. Dean. He was highly pleased and picked out the best for next day's Evening Leader to run. Then he showed me my snappy selections in The Leader of the moment, and I nearly burst with pride at sight of my first public appearance in any paper, signed and all that. Tears came to my eyes, but I don't think that Mr. Dean saw them. Don't care if he did; only an editor would understand a new girl artist's or girl writer's tears at sight of her first-born in art or literature, that is to say, of course! Gee. in the language of the loose, ain't it grand Just to be alive and doing? (To be continued.
I Heart Problems
As a Woman Thinketh By Helen Rowland
SEEN THROUGH A BRIDAL VEIL The Bride has gone! The Little Bride, light-hearted, radiant, debonair, has gaily stepped upon her Ship of Fa to, today, . And pet sail for the Port of Heart's Delight, and the Harbor of Eternal Love ! What does she see, I wonder, as she looks out at Life, with those young yes of hers? What does she hope to find, at the f nd of hrr Rainbow of dreams? What dot's LOVE mean to her? Docs it moan the transient glamor of the wedding-day, the perfumed rapture of the betrothal kiss, a momentary flash of glory like the rosetinted sunset. Or does it mean the quiet, steady radiance of an altar-fire the peaceful plow of consecrated candles? Does it mean the thrill of achievement, of conquest, the glitter of a wedding-ring Or the perfect fulfillment of a divine destiny? Is It a rosy dream of an eternal honeymoon, in starlit gardens sweet with heady incense Or is it a quiet pleasant vision of a lamplit room, an open-fire, monogrammod silver, bright, new dishes, and piles of snowy hemstitched linen, proudly displaying HIS initials In every corner? Will it inspire her to sit and dream of Him, all day, to spend long hours at her looking-glass making herself more radiantly beautiful for his eyes; to live only for his compliments and kisses Or will it bring her down to sane reality, make her forgetful of self and of her petty vanities, and prompt her to concentrate on economy and cooking, and on all the dear delightful, tiresome details of making a man COMFORTABLE? Will it goad hr into foolish Jealousy, and into asking suspicious and searching questions, every time he is late for dinnei Or will it fill her with such complete and satisfying confidence, such
sublime faith, that though he never came at all, there would be no question in her mind, whatever? Will it make her exacting, critical, capricious, arbitrary, demanding a pretty and expensive parasite, Or will it make her kind and thoughtful, cenerous, and forbearing? What does she seek Thrills, adoration, and the blinding inid.-t of love's rapture. Or heartease, and the quiet, gentle hand-clasp of perfect understanding? Wild uncertainty or swrot security? Eternal courtship or life-long companionship? Won hip or comradeship? Ah, Little Bride, so gaily setting tail upon your Ship of Fate. Unless love is BOTH of these, It is not Perfect Love!
Yet, they are as far apart, and as different As Purgatory and Paradise And you. alone, must lind your own Paradise. You. alone, must seek the pot-of-gold. At the end of your rainbow of dreams! You. a'one, know what LOVE means to von!
Dear Mrs. Thompson: Will you please give mo the address of some one who will advise me concerning the movies? I nm anxious to find out if a. pretty girl with talent, but too poor to travel and find out for herself, can bo a success. BLUE EYES. Get a movie magazine, whirh will furnish you with the addresses of the different companies. Then write to those which appeal to you the most, and are nearest home, stating your ambitions and enclosing a picture of yourself and stamps to return the picture and reply. Dear Mrs. Thompson: I work in the telephone office nnd make pretly good money. I would like to have some of it to spend, but my father takes it all every week. He does not need it, but he says he has a right to take it from all of his children. What do you think about it? LUCY. It is truly hard to have your earnings taken from you, for it leaves you little incentive to work. I think
you ought to come to an understanding l
wth your father and tell him that you will not be extragavant with your money. Ask him to help you to plan a budget or your expenditures, allotting so much for your board, to be paid out each week to your mother. The rest of your salary ought to be carefully divided among the following Items: Clothing, recreation and saving. Do not forget the last item, for in these days of surprises it does not seem safe to have no nest egg to fall back on in case of emergency, and then, too, your father will be better satisfied if you promise to save a certain amount each week. A good way to save is to go to the bank on the way home from the office after you have received your pay. If you put your money in the bank, you are not so likely to spend it for unessentials. I think that if you go over the matter with your father in this businesslike way, you will find that he will be willing to help you handle your pay yourself. But you must make up your mind that when you have once gained his confidence you must keep
your word and do what you havo , I 1 ... : . .
piuiiiiifu wnn your money. Dear Mrs. Thompson:
M . Y - : h I if J l
What's in a Name (Copyright)
ELLEN. j Very few people know that Ellen ! may be spelled Ellin and still remain the same charming name which signifies a "light" or "radience." In these days of affectation when Ediths turn into Edythes over night and Alice be- j comes Alys, it is interesting to dis- j rnrflr tTint pvpn f Vi n onmAirti'it olmnla )
name of Ellen, ia capable of adaptation. The name comes from the Greek
root Ele which was first used in the i
name of the moon diety, Selene. From Ele again sprang the most noted of all Greek names, Helene, from
which Ellen is directly derived. The latter name made its first appearance In Scotland where the pronunciation caused the H to be dropped from
Helene. In Wales, Ellin was adopted in place of Helene. It came Into being through the Elgys Ilan, the church of Helen, which was greatly revered by the in- i
sular Kelts. Ellen has achieved almost as great popularity In this country as her predecessor, Helen. Her vogue was greatly increased by Sir Walter Scott's charming poem, "The Lady of the Lake." Many English celebrities have borne the name, among them the greatest of English actresses, Ellen Terry. Amber Is Ellen's talismanic stone. The ancients believed that It would protect Its wearers from contagion and would guard them from danger when traveling. Thursday is Ellen's lucky day, and 5 her lucky number.
Dr. AHce Masaryk, speaking at Eaton Square, England. Dr. Alice Masaryk, daughter of the president of the Czecho-Slovak republic, is giving a series of addresses in England, at which she tells of the needs and aspiration's of her country. Miss Masaryk was persecuted by Austria during the war, at one time being imprisoned nine months in a Vienna iail.
BOY DIES OF INJURIES, ANDERSON. Ind., July 16. Kenneth Lawson, 4 years old, son of Elwood Lawson, living seven miles southwest of Anderson, died at noon today from injuries suffered when he was kicked and trampled by a horse, yesterday. Kenneth and an older brother were playing in their father's barnyard when the younger boy was kicked and trampled by the animal.
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father loves you and your mother. Your chance of bringing about a reconciliation is to convince your mother that your father still loves her. She seems to have become very cynical and you will have to overcome her skepticism. If you can not get your mother to see that your father loves her and she persists in her attempt to get a divorce, my advice would be to go with your father. Your mother's bad temper is likely to make life very unhappy for you. You are sure of your father's love, and he probably needs you more than your mother does. When she misses you both, as she undoubtedly will, her remorse may cause her to love both of you again and your little family may be happy once more.
I am a girl of 12 years of age, and have a broken heart. My mother and father don't get along together. Mother thinks divorce is tho best. It breaks my heart. My father loves me, but mother says it is all put on. I love mother and father very much. My father says ho can take care of mo better than mother. Mother says if she gets a divorce she will take me. I have always been happy. I live on a farm of 12$ acres. We have a car and I was very happy but. nm not now. We have all the modern things and I don't see why wo can't be happy. Mother js good to me
I hut as a rule she has a bad temper, j Father is good to mother but she
don't think so. Of course I can t tell you all that is in my heart. Please tell me what to do. Can I hold them together? A Little Girl Pick at Heart. Dear Little Girl Sick at Heart: Your father and mother seem to be tho victims of a misunderstanding. The main trouble seems to be with your mother. You say that your
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FEW FOLKS HAVE GRAY HASR NOW
Druggist Says Ladles Are Using Recipe ot Sage Tea and Sulphur.
Hair that loses its color and lustre, ov when it fades, turns gray, dull and Ufeless. is caused by a lack of sulphur in the hair. Our grandmother made up a mixture of Sage Tea and Sulphur to kep her locks dark and beautiful, and thousands of women and men who
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Furs and Mystery By PALAIS ROYAL If, through some enlightening miracle, the animals whose pelts are now on display in unreliable fur dealers' stores could return to life and get back into their own skins one would witness the world's greatest living collection of misfits and misnomers. For instance, we would find some poor, puny little fox tripping over his own skin, which fit him like a glove before being so tremendously "expanded" after removal from bis body. Then, too, we'd find a group of muskrats strutting about in the skins they once wore, but which, through a variety of treatments and dyeings, had taken on the appearance of seal, mink, sablo and such like, and whose names they now brazenly bear. Again, wo'd see the little South American coypu, whose trade nar.io is nutria, trying to discover what had happened to his former coat and why it now bore a tag of beaver. Perhaps tho raccoons would feel flattered on seeing their own peiu? labeled lynx, and maybe our old friends the oppossums would feel the samo way about their coats being classed as stono marten. Who knows? Certainly the army of rabbits that would have to be on hand to fill tho many skins they once wore would be bewildered at tho great variety of colors and names under wrich their former jackets now went, just as Maria and Thomas Cat would ponder over the change that had befallen the raiment they'd worn through nine eventful lives. Besides all this we'd undoubtedly see innumerable animals, each the lowliest of its class, climbing back into their inferior outer garments which, after having been well "doctored," were marked "first quality." For while it's true enough that the leopard cannot change its spots, we've found that man can certainly make a first-clas3 job of it after said leopard's demise. And so. in an allegorical manner, we point out to you, friend reader, a few of the many serious substitutions which occur, and warn you in all sincerity to BEWARE OF THE WOLF IX SHEEP'S CLOTHING! (To be Continued) Copyright, 1919
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