Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 46, Number 244, 24 August 1921 — Page 5

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND., WEDNESDAY, AUG. 24, 1921.

PAGE FIVE

"The Love Pendulum

By MARION RUBINCAM

ON.

anyone else but him. I wisely refrained, and when he let me go, I went into my room to dress. "All right, go ahead if it amuses you," he said. As I dressed I wondered whether

i was doing right. I did not want

Win to approve of all this if he did

wouldn't it mean that he cared even

less than I thought?

But the game was begun, it had to

zo on. Next day I phoned Colin Me

; Ready to go with me to an art exI hibit, a private view of a French paint

er s work. I brought him home to have tea. Win found us together when

he came in. Having begun the game, I had to play it through. I went everywhere, not to one party a night, but to two

THE GAME GOES

Chapter 28. But next day at tea time 1 tpok great care to have Nedda with me. So when the musician came, it was to drink tea and carry on an informal conversation. He did not like Nedda, fo I guessed. i "She is so tall, so cold, like a statue, yo impersonal," he told me once. "I like not marble statues. I like apple blossoms such as you." "Apple blossoms fade they live only for a day. A marble statue is

eternal," I answered. "Ah, you are witty, as well as beautiful," he answered, his hand closing over mine. "And I am very wise as well." I answered, and slipped my hand from his. This was a few days after the first tea, and Nardonski had come in unexpectedly. Meantime, Gwendolyn had come dqwn to see me, bringing the littic man, Colin McReady, as she ha.l promised. "He is an artist. Some day he will be a great artist." Gwen said. '! discovered him painting great things in a garret. That is romantic in Paris, one does it on the Left Bank or in

Montmartre. But it is merely uncom- to her appearance There ai fortable in New York.'" so many clever little ways of

jir. .Mcneaay jaugnea. ne laoisea over the chairs in my room, and f;nally pulled the most uncomfortable one over to the fireplace, where he hunched himself up as I had seen him first. I noticed, when I. handed him his cup of tea. that he had gray-green eyes, remarkable eyes when he opened them. Most of the time he kept them half squinted he .shut himself up be

hind them

. I took Win to all the shows. W-, fnnnffirfeit Ittne to concerts with Nardonski, I"U' OUmmm iSSUe, -

i reasury Department Warns

24. TCe

or three.

I went

had Conn come tor tea every day i was home. When there was nothing

to do of an evening, I had people come in. I never went to bed before one or two, and then slept from exhaustion until late the next day.

I grew thinner and I had to use rouge every evening to take away the whiteness of my face. Win thrived under such a regime; his superb health never failed him. I played the game harder and harder. Every man I met at Gwen's. however, I added to the list of those whom she seemed especially interested in, I deliberately flirted with. Not all of them liked me Many of them, who dropped in for tea every after

noon while I was home. I hated this sort of life. If it had not been for Colin, I could not have gone through with it. Tomorrow A Friend.

WASHINGTON. Au

treasury in an announcement today gave warning of the circulation of four new counterfeit federal reserve notes. The counterfeits include a ?50 note on the New York Federal Reserve bank, a $20 note on the Chicago bank, a $10 note on the Kansas City bank, and a $5 note on the Chicago bank. The first two were said to be dis tinguished by blue instead of 'green backs, and the latter two by the poor quality of the paper.

WOMAN OF RICHMOND

TAKES UP BANKING AS HER BUSINESS CAREER

TY

KENT

FORBES

Win came home for tea that day. lt

was the first time he had been home so early in weeks. I decided it w?3 Gwen's presence that had brought him, but I said nothing. I lit a cigarette Gwen of course had been smoking ever since she arrived. We're dining with the Marsdens tonight," I told him. "Early, for we arc going to a show. Then to Lewis' it is an all night party. Do you feel uu to it?" This was never the way I had announced a party before. Win glanced at me in surprise. "So nice to find two young reopl like you. equally fond of going about,' Gwen said. "I thought at first that you were very demure and quiet, Connie

dear." "I?" I pretended great surprise. No, I had to stay in because I hadn't been well. I'm feeling splendid now. Tomorrow Win, Nedda has a bridge party. As you don't play, I accepted provisionally for you. Ted Mitehd will take me if you don't want to go." It appeared Win wanted to go. Well that was something gained. By taking an independent attitude, I had at least won him over for one evening. I lit another cigarette. . "I heard such an amusing scandal today." I began. I never had thought scandal "amusing" ;ind I had never repeated it before. Win listened, open-mouthed almost, while I told a story with a slightly disagreeable ending. After the guests had left, Win turned to roe sudednly. "Connie, I don't quite like to hear you talk like you did today. And you never said you smoked. What's got into you?" "Nothing, my dear boy," I snswered with apparent indifcrence. "Give me another cigarete, please." "You will be ill again. Come here, I want to talk to you." "You haven't time," I answered cheerfully. "You have to dress fo;dinner. Mrs. Marsden hates peopls who are late." "You are flirting with that alleged

musician." Win burst out. I stood in the doorway of my room smiling at him. "Suppose I am!" I answered. "I'm flirting with you too." He gave r. sudden laugh and came over the room to me. Before I could close the door he had caught me and kissed me. For an instant I wanted to protest that I did not like the musician ncr

A TOUCH OF COLOR The woman who is very pale need

I not use rouge to lend a touch of color

re ever

giving

an effective color without actually spreading a layer of it over the cheeks. For instance, there is the color of the costume. The pale or sallow girl should never wear white, not even a white waist. White has a deadening effect. It can be the most beautiful and it can be the most harmful color. If you are too dark in complexion white will make the skin darker, if

you are sallow it will increase the sallowness, if you are pale it will make the pallor ghastly, if you have a bad skin it will emphasize every blemish. If you are sallow choose cream color or flesh pink, never bright pink. If you are white faced wear flesh pink blouses, which almost seem to reflect their tint in the face. Ir you are a brunette, or if you are very sunburned so that the skin is darker than you wish never wear very dark or very "loud" colors. Then there i3 one important matter. Introduce one single note of bright color in the costume. A scarlet tie on the blouse suits the brunette, a grey

tie the girl with grey eyes, yellow or brown for brown eyes, and a matching shade of blue will help wonderfully to

bring out the eyes of a blonde. If you do not wear ties wear a fancy colored

necklace. The artificial beads, so cleverly manufactured today, come in all sorts of shapes and colors and will

rj njh Anne

y s;

MANY CHANGES MADE IN PREBLE SCHOOLS

.EATON. O., Aug. 24. Prof. Walter Waggoner, head of Lanier township schools, has been named a member of the county teachers' examining board, in anrfee1 Prnf TJpilhpn Koch, of West

I Sonora. Prof. C. R. Coblentz, of New

Paris, has been reappointed to menv bership on the board. The quarterly teachers' examination will be conduct

ed here Friday by , the examining board. Prof. L. F. Schieser, formerly head of the Monroe township centralized schools, has entered upon hrs duties as assistant to County School Superintendent AV. S. Fogarty, to which posi

tion he was appointed in accordance with the new state school code. Prof. Schieser and his family have taken up a residence in Eaton. Walter Collins, newly appointed su

perintendent of public schools in West)

Alexandria, has removed irom Cleveland to West Alexandria and is arranging to begin his duties at the opening of the school term. Collins was at one time a resident of New

Paris. G. H. Tullis. who resigned the superintendency of schools in Camden, has accepted a place in the public schools in Marion, 111., as instructor in mathematics. Under the new state school code. John W. Hoffman of Eaton, has been appointed county school attendance officer. His territory embraces all of Preble county, outside of Eaton. His pay will be reckoned on a fee basis, and he will be under direction of

County School Superintendent W. Fogarty.

-xg

mate friend, In fact he was asked to be Hamilton's second in the famous duel with Aaron Burr, and was ?r. close touch with the finances of the treasury. Winter was secretary of Washington's committee of safety and was one of the two men who signed the first issue of United States currency.

it is Mrs. Bowman s ambition to stand as well, at least in a smaller way, in her generation as her di tinguished ancestors did in theirs. When asked for her credentials in belonging to the National Federation cf Business and Professional Women's

Clubs, of which she is a state president, he answered, "I am in on three

counts: Banking is my business,) music my profession, and my real job; Is wife and housekeeper." Then shoi adds diplomatically, "Having the fin-1 est husband ever captured, the job is I my favorite."

FORMER RUSHVILLE RESIDENT RUN DOWN BY AUTOMOBILE RUSHVILLE, Ind., Aug.' 24. Edward Oglesby, age "5. formerly a contractor of this city, was run down and fatally injured Sunday by an automobile at St. Petersburg, Fla.. his home. He is survived by a widow and two daughters, Mrs. Fred Fox, of Los Angeles, Cal., and Mrs. Rome Medley, of Cincinnati. TO BUILD MORE SHIPS. TOLEDO, O., Aug. 24. Unemployment is expected to be relieved somewhat here this winter as the result of a steamship company announcing extensive shipbuilding plans. .

Quebec has cut its streetcar acci-! dents 50 per cent. 1

Polar Bear Flour is King

For Sale by Your Grocer OMER G. WHELAN Distributor

nJJ-uJnnJrrl.r-lCll- ' "

Heart Problems

Fancy necklaces are in vogue and lend a becoming touch of color. lend a most becoming touch to your costume. A. D. S.; Lc-ra; D. 71. K. ; Mrs. A. Z.;

Geline MacDonald Bowman

When the Merchants National ban!:

of Richmond, Va., decided to open aj woman's department it was an 5nnova-j tion unheard of in that state. The question of the proper manager for the new department was an important one and Fate must have had a hand in their choice. J. Geline MacDonaM: Bowman (Mrs. J. K.), after much persuasion on the part of the bank offi-j cials and much objection on the part, of her conservative parents and h conservative family of her husband, took the position.

Mrs. Bowman's ffrfat.erpatT9nd-!

father, Joseph Winter of New York, was Alexander Hamilton's most inti-

1 ttltUUIlUlllItlHIItUmilllMllltlllltlttlllllltllltHttllllltlKtttdlllMttlllllll

s i! DRS. CRAIN 1

HOME CARE OF SICK GLASSES ORGANIZED

OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIANS

Sanitarium 2116 Main Tel. 3S12 1 i Office Murray Theatre Bldg. lj

!l Hours: 9-12 Tel. 19S3 1 1

TiiimiiitiiittitiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiititinini;iMtitiitirniitiiitifliliii!imHiiMiiiiiiitiiiiiii ;

JENKINS & CO.

AN UNUSUAL SHOWING .. of Silver ite Bar Pins

In beautiful and attractive designs. Priced very special at

$1.25

Each

Jenkins & Co.

726 Main Street

) Miss M. R. F.: Exercise, or massage,

Dear Mrs. Thompson: If a girl goeniwill reduce the size of the legs. This

car riding with "a boy, would it he proper to stop along the road if they both acted all right? GREEN. A great deal of heartache in the world results from indiscretions while girls and boys are out automobile riding unchaperoned. It would not bo wise or "proper" to stop along the roadside. To passers by it would not be evident that both "acted all right." Dear Mrs. Thompson: Will you kindly advise if it is not. cprrect for a gentleman to raise his hat when with a lady and she speaks to a gentleman not known to him?

CURIOUS. Yes. he should tip his hat. Dear Mrs. Thompson: I am a girl of eighteen and have a boy friend who boards at our house. He is a very nice boy and treats me kindly. My mother objects to my going w ith him because he is not well-to-dc.

I love him and would feel very lonely without his company. Please advise me whether I should go steady with him or should I listen to my mother? PEGGY. Listen to your mother. Keep the your.g man as a friend, but do not go with him exclusively until you ara older and until he is in a financial position which would warrant his requesting you to give up other friends.

same advice may be given in those cases where the limbs are thin, as exercise builds up the muscles, while it consumes the excess fat. In massaging, the muscles should be kneaded with deep motions, in order to be fullybenefited. Many people merely rub the surface of the muscles. In reducing, a solution of Epson salts or very salty water may be used on the skin with the massage. To fatten the limbs, feed the tissues by using cocoa butter with the massage. Sixteen; Miss B. W.: Some girls

appear to be over-developed, but it is' an uneven growth, which is overcome; in a few years, when the body attains I its correct proportions. I Cold water dashed over the chest, each morning, followed by a brisk j rub, using a coarse towel, will be all ' that most women require to keep all the muscles of the chest in good con-j dition. Women w'ho have matured,' may easily reduce the size of the bust!

through general reduction. All Inquiries addressed to Mrs. Forbes In care of the "Beauty Chats" department will be answered in these columns !n their turn. This requires considerable time, however, owing to the great number received. So. if a personal or quicker reply is desired, a stamped and selt-addressed. envelope must be enclosed with the Question.

The Wayne county chapter of the

American Red Cross is organizing' classes in "Home Care of the Sick" j for Cambridge City and vicinity.. These classes are free to the public, j and while they are not designed to . make professional nurses they will I

instruct in the care of the sick in the home. The course covers a period of about eight weeks and consists of fifteen lessons two being given each week. Those who wish to register for tha Cambridge City classes may do so by telephoning Mrs. Scudder. Cambridge City, or by coming to Cambridge City school building, Monday, Aug. 29, between 1:30 and 3:30 o'clock The only expense involved will bfor the text book which will cost about 60 cents.

Tired and Nervous from the Lack of Sleep? Do You Know the Reason Why?

Sleep time is the time when the reconstructive processes in your body are busiest turning food into blood, and nerve tissue, and living cells. That's the reason why lack of sleep makes you irritable, inefficient and nervous; and why you lack "punch" when you don't get a proper amount of the right kind of sleep. It has been the experience of many that the cup of tea or coffee, taken at meal-time, robs them of sleep. In Gould and Pyle's Cyclopedia of Medicine and Surgery youll find that "caffein is a rapidly acting stimulant to the brain and spinal cord, quickens the action of the heart, and raises blood pressure." This makes it a very good medicine if prescribed by a doctor for cases of collapse, when a patient needs to have his system abnormally forced into activity. But caffeine is not good for

people whose systems don't need to be drugged. So if you don't get your proper sleep at night, it may be because you are being kept awake by tea or coffee.

Stop tea and coffee for awhile and drink Postum the delicious cereal beverage. Postum is a pure cereal product, and contains no harmful element whatsoever. Your first taste of Postum will surprise and please you. Many people prefer the flavor of Postum to that of coffee. Order Postum from your grocer today. Drink this hot, refreshing beverage in place of tea or coffee for ten days, and see what a wonderful difference it will make in the way you feeL Postum comes in two forms: Instant Postum (In tins) made instaatly in the cup by the addition of boiling water. Postern Cereal (in packages of larger balk, for those who prefer to make the drink while the meal is being prepared) made by boiling for 20 minutes.

THURSDAY SPECIAL Here is your chance to get good, fresh BUN'S at 10c per dozen for your picnic Thursday afternoon. BREAD PRICES REDUCED IVi-pound loaf 11c 1-pound loaf, 8c; or 2 for 15c Bread is your best food eat more of it. Get good Bread at The New System Bakery 913 Main Street

Gluten Flour Minute Coffee Instantaneous Chocolate Wild Rice Biscuit Flour Ripe Olives

W

e oeil KlKN

the highest grade Macaroni, Spaghetti, Egg Noodles anc other Macaroni Products.

John M. Eggemeyer & Sons Bee Hive Grocery 3 Phones

Save 25 to 33! 3 During This Sale

RICHMOND'S DAYLIGHT STORE

Sale Thursday and Friday, Aug. 25-26

ojidvance Sale of

Growing Girls Sport Shoes

These . Fall J:J I Jlodels Ja

Growing girls' Sport Shoes, shown in brown and .black; 9-inch tops $3.50 to $6.00 NEFF & NUSBAUM 7th and Main

Does it Pay to buy Furs now? Read and Learn

A FUR COAT gives that air of affluence to the appearance which every woman so craves but this is not intended as an eulogy on fur coats but rather on our AUGUST FUR SALE PRICES. The woman who waits till winter to make her fur purchase will be disappointed, for prices then will be higher and she, remembering AUGUST FUR SALE prices, will feel a decided compunction about paying winter's high values. Our prices are so low right now that it makes us gleeful when we see the figures in print if we can only make you understand that this is a regular sale of new, up-to-date quality merchandise at prices very, very much lower than

ot seasons past and also very much lower than the approaching season then we are sure you will come ih and try on a coat, or a separate fur piece, and make your own comparisons. '.: Besides our entire stock we will have with us a representative of one of the largest fur houses in the market, who will display his line of furs during this sale and sell and deliver any article he has on display at the discount price. If you anticipate buying furs this winter, buy now and save from 25 to 33J4 discount. Sale Lasts Two Days Only Thursday and Friday, August 25 and 26

HI