Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 11, 13 January 1922 — Page 5

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM. AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND., FRIDAY, JAN. 13, 1922.

PAGE FIVE

I The MirMJe Ground

J By MARION RUBINCAM

MR. ARNOLD

Chapter 58

Invite everyone. Aimee. you must be

the

hostess and Dour tea. Mrs. Tal-

Adam Arnold was 40 and quite plain-ib t d fc ly wished himself 30, or even 2o. The; '

'JEWS OF RICHMOND

SUBSCRIBE $1,000 TO RELIEVE KINDRED

older he became, the more he affected

everything youthful. . , At 20 he had fallen la love with women of 30-odd; at 30 he preferred them in their 20's; at 40 he found his greatest interest in fluffy-haired. fluffyr brained Kirls in their teens. He be-

About $1,000 wa3 subscribed by Richmond Jews for the relief of Jews in

; eastern and central Europe at a lunch

eon held in the Y. M. C. A. Other sub-

1 scriptions for the alleviation of the

daughter. Aimee, you should wear a

sort of drapy Italian gown to go with; my Italian drawing room. You must let i

me send you one." T'l 1 fnnlrA Ann Hiortlrn 4 mi tr n n

swered smiling, and anixous to impress suffering Jews will be accepted gladly, this man with her cleverness. "But vou: County Chairman Sam Fred said.

pan to hate serious things and serious j may send me that brown and gold tis-! Indiana's quota of $400,000 is being people. He was attracted by the little sue material we saw in the window of i raised this week. The Jewish Relief

giggling laugn mai Amy pusststu, me antique snop yesterday, ill use

Beauty Chats By Edna Kent Forbes

Rnd by her easy excitement and her

great enthusiasm her pleasure m everything new. He had worked hard when he was young. At 40 he was trying to recapture ihs lost youth. He liked to sit and laugh awkwardly at the silly jokes of college boys. He could not always see the humor in them, but he. longed for the irresponsible point of view that these lads had. It was a struggle in which, inevitably, he must be defeated, for no mature man, bordering on middle age, can recapture his lost youth. He explained that his youth "was not lost, only mislaid," and laughed at his joke. But the effect was the same, it was a ghost that fled before him and melted when he reached out his hand to capture it.'

He had a great deal of money. Much j was inherited, most he had made him- j self, after his tyranical father had died. ! His father, had kept him so hard at

work he had little time for fun. He had more money now than he wanted and the thought he could use it to buy back youth. 1 Eut all he could do was to buy presents for youthful friends. The emerald bracelet he gave Amy was a mere top to him, but in her great joy at owning it. Arnold felt, vicariously, a real thrill of young pleasure. He felt that if he ga.ve lavishly enough, he could buy love and find youth again with a youthful wife. The young girls bred in the city had an oldness and a sophistication that annoyed him. But Amy, in spite of her city mannerisms, was at heart still a little girl from the country, wide-eyed with wonder and red-cheeked with excitement over the pleasures of the city. Mrs. Talbot watched him curiously, not knowing anything of him except that he gave Amy presents that amazed her by their value, and that fhe had not met his type before. To keep his head from going bald, he

used great quantities of ointments,'

rw mo iiaar vci iuivajs suciv aitu smiiy. His greatest sorrow was the patch of gray behind his ears. He seriously considered dyeing this black, and when very confidential, asked the advice of his friends upon this important subject. To make his figure appear fhin and young, he wore college cut clothes, and bright ties which he thought youthful his father had made him wear black ones. To keep himself from getting stout ,he never ate potatoes and took his tea without sugar and with two slices of lemon. But maturity crept upon him in spite of these precautions and the fact that he danced every night he could find a partner: "My house will be done next week,"

it oam, tia iic uiu.uk ins tea aim itokto longingly at the seventh sandwich he felt he should not take. "I've been building a house. Mrs. Talbot, just off Fifth avenue a very nice block. I've had the biegest firm of interior decorators do it inside for me. It ought to he beautiful,; they're charging enough for it." There was a naive simplicity in the way he told of this new toy. "It's being done after the Italian manner," he went on. "The old yard

is

PERSIAN DESIGNS FORM NEW COLOR NOTE FOR SPRING

W 0Mm

.-l . 11 i . . A AAA AAA

that." - ' commin.ee means 10 coueci jn.uuu.uuu

Adam was delighted at being allowed 1 froni American Jewry to feed the hun-

to spend money. At parting, he kept gry, clothe the suffering, stave off the Amy several minutes in the dark lit-; ghastly ravages or typhus and cholera, tie hallway. Mrs. Talbot was sure he an(, protect the 300,000 homeless orkissed her good-bye, but she dared Phail3 wno have been robbed of their IlOt 8.SK. 1 nstirnl hrenrlirinnisra a nrl n ro nnu'

Of course, there was a lot of senti- wandering, desolate and foresaken, in mentality among the boys and girls at Russia and other countries of Europe, homebut somehow a kiss from Adam i Rabbi Kronegold and Harry GoldArnold ternfled her. Where was Dick? .' stein of Indianapolis presented the Why didn the come around any more? j plight of the Jewry of continental Tomorrow A Tea Party Europe to members of the race in

Richmond. Although the number of persons of Jewish extraction in Rich

mond is comparatively small, they quickly subscribed nearly $1,000, and j

hope to bring the donation above that figure. Five in Fields. Relief Committee of Europe, reports, that between Mohilev, Russia, and Teraspol, on the Roumanian border,

35.000 refugees from pogroms are living in the open fields and woods, over

an area 01 approximately 100 t.ngiisn

miles. Unless help is brought to them 1

immediately, they will perish of cold,

hunger and disease.

Three hundred thousand refugees from Russia, including the infernc called Ukrainia, have fled to Poland, crowding into communities hardly able to care for their own needy. There is acute suffering on the part of half a million Jews in the Odessa region, and 40,000 in Roumania. The refugees

... ..y, , Ill .... I. 1 I ' JAM" I II U , i . I

hasn't the benefit of the classes and gymnasiums the big concerns go In for. The exercises really should be taken outdoors or on a roof; but if this is Impossible, a room with the windows opened will ao. Five minutes should be given to deep breathing while the girls stand erect with hands

resting on the hips, and five minutesi

should be devoted to exercises mat make the arms swing and that bring the shoulders back, the head up and the chest out. Any book on gymnastics will give you plenty of suggestions. Every week or so there is something in this space about just such exercises as these. If you can interest your fellow workers and keep them at it, your appearance will improve and your work will benefit and you will not have that cramped and achy feeling after a few hours at on nffleo rtpfik

E. W.: A woman 30 years old 5 ft. 2 in. should weigh 120 pounds. C. O. R.: A girl 17, 5 ft. 44 in. j Ehould weigh 123 pounds.- You are nearly 20 pounds overweight. I would

not advise you to take any quick re-; objects to my going with other young ductlon method, but to exercise and j men, but I think I anv pretty young diet until you are the proper weight, to go with any one steady. Please TALL. BETSY: Cocoa butter can beaivlce me. . MILL. , . , . . . j I agree with you; you are too young purchased In five and ten cent cakes at jf o with ye -steady." In fact practically all drug Btores. When i think, you are too young to go with slightly warmed, it massages easily. 'a beau except to school and neigubor-

If you are underweight, you can nil hood parties. : t .

Dear Mrs. Thompson f Please tell me if it i3 considered proper to correspond formally by the use of a typewriter. TOMMY It is not correct, pen and ink should be used. "

out the arms, legs and chest more easily by taking a little extra nourishment every day. All Inquiries addressed to Mrs. Forbes in care of the "Beauty Chits' department will be answered In these

columns in their turn. This requires considerable time, however, owing t3 the great number received. So, if a ( personal or quicker reply Is desired, a stamped and self-addressed envelope must be enclosed with '.he -question. The Editor.

Heart Problems

. SUITS Dry Cleaned We Deliver

Phone 1072' Richmond Dry Cleaning Co.

$125

Dear Mrs. Thompson: I am fifteen ! vt.n""'nniituniiituiiJrttiimmirtiittHiiitiinmimtiuiimii:; years old and am allowed to go with

boys and I have a very nice young . friend of whom I think quite a bit. He ;

Statement No. 3

ax'

Office workers usually sit badly. Girls who work in offices almost al

ways become round-shouldered and hollow-chested, unless they take enough exercise out of office hours to overcome the effects of sitting at a

! desk or unless they sit better than

most of the office workers I see. My suggestion today is that the girl who sits all day long at an office desk

should try to work with her chair j"

pulled closer to the desk, so as to keep her back a little straighter. My other suggestion is that she form the other girls in her office into a gymnasium class, to practice dsep

and!!

Back hurt you? Can't straighten up without feeling sudden pains, sharp aches and twinges? Now listen! That

pain. It is perfectly harmless

doesn't burn or discolor the skin. j Limber up ! Don't suffer! Get a small trial bottle from any dug store, I

lumbago, sciatica or maybe from a j and after using it just once, you'll . strain, and you'll get blesses relief the j forget that you ever, had backache, i moment you rub your back with sooth- lumbago or sciatica, because your back 1 1 ing, penetrating "St. Jacobs Oil." I will never hurt or cause any more.! Nothing else takes out soreness, lame- j misery. It never disappoints and has 1

r.ess ana sunness so quicKiv. i uu uccu itxuimmriiuTO iui uu jems. simply rub it on and out comes the Advertisement.

have found their painful, tragic way j breathing and shoulder straightening

into Italy, Austria, France, Belgium and Holland, and there are thousands of them in Constantinople. Fifty percent of all houses belonging to Jews in Eastern Europe have been destroyed. In Roumania. Galicia. Eastern Poland, Southern Russia

aud Lithuania, the number approximates 90 percent. These figures may ; give you some idea of the tremendous j task still' before us, said Mr. Marshall.;

exercises for ten minutes during the lunch hour. Big business firms, realizing the value of this, are doing it for their employes, but my suggestion is for the girl who works in a small

office with two or three others and j

Give your bath tub a surprise bathe with Blue Devil and leave no rings. Advertisement.

BOYS! Start training your hair. Tell mother to bring you to BARTER'S SHOP In the Murray Bidg.

Sweet Cider New Horns Sauer Kraut New Mince Meat Midget Sweet Pickles New Comb Honey Genuine Orleans Molasses Chocolate for Candy Making Sugar for Candy Making Coloring for Candy and Cakes John M. Eggemeyer & Sons Bee Hive Grocery 3 Phones

I IF YOU LOVE HER Don't work her to death; buy her a j WAYNE WASHER I It washes finest fabrics thoroughly ! without tearing and at little cost.

WM. H. MEERHOFF 9 South 9th St. Phone 1236

QUALITY FOOTWEAR for Men, Women and Children

SNOB

srom

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Jenkins & Company have 1 built up their wtch repair- f ing by making real "timekeepers" out .of "just f watches." Expert workmanship, painstaking care, the best of equipment in materials and tools, and the desire to please you all this means satisfactory re- . suits to your watch. j It is economical to have it 1 done right by .

Jenkins & Co.

See Monday Talk No. 4

rallmiimmiiuimnuiunu'iiiuinmmntiiMiiitutuiMttit

Barred crepe is used to make this simple frock featuring four loose panels on the skirt and a simple bloure. The front of the blouse is slashed and Persian silk adds a touch of color by showing through the slashes. Persian designs in rich color combinr.tfons trim many o? the new spring frocks.

i in the Murray Bidg. M

There is only one real 1 I

IB

HFtrHhff'

THE MODERN MOTHER

faces problems far beyond those of her forbears. She herself must be a much more competent person, combin-

being fixed with a glass roof and i mg in one individual the duties of

iron grill work and a fountain : and nurse, cook, teacher and moral inpalms and things like that. Very beau- i tractor. It is no wonder that many tif ul, very expensive." He always cou-1 conscientious women break down unpled the two beauty and cost being ' der the strain, and that others drag po closely associated in his mind. out miserable existence; always "You should have a housewarming." , tired, and yet unable to take a day's Amy suggested. "Do have another i vacation. Such women will find themsandwich! They're .made with cucum-! selves benefited and their burden.!

ber. so they're thinning."

made easier by the use of Lydia E

"Oh, are they?" Adam promptly took Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, which

two. a gleam of joy m his eyes that was made tor sunenng women, and really was youthful. "Yes, let's have does not fail to relieve them.

a housewarming. I'll give a tea, and

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in

"Faster, Jimmy, taster t Yoa know mother said there won't be any brtakfamt tilt we brine tke KeUogg't Cora

tlakes:"

a

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amp ate flavor and enspness! ICEIXjOGG'S against any (Jem Flakes you ever ate! Takes the rough edges off hopping out of the covers these, snappy mornings just thinking about that lusty bowl of Kellogg's Corn Flakes waiting down-stairs! . Big and brown and crispy-crunchy flakes a revelation in appetizing flavor, wonderful in wholesome goodness the most delicious cereal you ever tasted ! Instantly you like Kellogg's, not only because of appealing flavor, but because Kellogg's are not "leathery" ! Kellogg's are a delight to eat, as the little foljs as well as the big ones will tell you! And Kellogg's ought to be best thev're the original Corn Flakes! You have only

to make comparison to quickly realize how perfect they are! KELLOGG'S Corn Flakes for tomorrow morning's spread! They get the day started right! Insist upon KELLOGG'S Corn Flakes in the . RED and GREEN package the kind that are not leathery !

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TOASTED CORN

FLAKE?

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by Mrs. Mary Preston Cooking Expert and Food Analyst I've told you this before about the egg-powder test for baking powder. But I don't want to see any woman fooled by this trick if I can help it. So I'll tell you about it again. Here is the test: A demonstrator puts a teaspoonful of baking powder into a glass. This baking powder contains dried egg powder, put into it for the sole purpose of fooling you. He then pours water into the glass, stirring the baking powder. Immediately a heavy foam rises to the top of the glass and lasts for several minutes. (Every baking powder will fizz but the dried egg makes a foam.) Now you are led to believe that the foam shows that the baking powder is of greater strength than the one you are using. Also, that the dried egg seals the gas in tiny bubbles so that it can't escape into the air. This is ridiculous. If you add a speck of dried egg powder to the cheapest, weakest baking powder made, you will get just as rich a foam when water is poured on it. Egg powder does not improve baking powder one bit. The only reason for using it is to create an unnatural effervescence and to give a false impression of quality by tricky, demonstrations. There is only one real test for any baking powder that is the success of your baking. With Heekin's your baking results are guaranteed. A better baking powder cannot be made nor a purer one. Try Heekin's. If anything you bake with it does not turn out to your entire satisfaction, the price of the full can of baking powder, and the price of the ingredients in whatever you bake will be returned to you. Simply list the prices and send with your name and address to The Heekin Company, Cincinnati, Ohio. Buy a can today and use it you'll like Heekin's.

cjfandreds of Women are flockinq

tathisqreat BARGAIN EVENT

- rs Sensational Clearance,

Mm

jOli simply cannot afford to miss it!

j

Thousands of exquisite strap pumps, oxfords and boots are on sale - at prices that will make every woman gasp! We have slashed prices right and left with absolute disregard to cost or value. Everything that a woman's heart would wish for in the way of styles and leather combinations are to be found in this sale. They are not shoes bought for sale purposes, but our own regular stock, reduced tremendously for quick and final clearance. The prices' are so low that many will be able to afford TWO pairs instead of one. Come but come early, if you please.

V

The Largest Chain of Shoe Stores In The United States,

Richmond Store 705 Main St. Colonial Bidg. All Newark Stores Open Saturday Evenings to Accommodate Customers.

as