Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 56, 7 March 1922 — Page 5

.THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM,' RICHMOND, IND, TUESDAY, MARCH 7, 1922

PAGE FIVE

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WHO'S WHO AXD WHAT'S HAPPENED. RICHARD BRABANT, one of N'ew York's most successful youngf lawyers, has suggested a year's leave of absence to his wife, SALLY, hoping that during that time she will learn enough of life to make her less a butterfly and more a helpmate. CHAPTER II A MARRIAGE OF INCONVENIENCE. "I'll have to think this over. Dick." Sally Brabant told her husband. "For me to take a year's vacation from be

ing married . seems well, it a bo

queer: "Sure it's queer,"-he agreed, flipping his cigarette into the fireplace. "But if it weren't so queer, we wouldn't have half as mapy divorces and un

happy marriages. I tell you, if marriage was like an advertising contract, and had to be renewed at the end of a few years, it would be a different proposition all around. I've said for a long time that vaca-

ioe Klumph tlons from matrimony would be a good thing Nora Macallister and I were discussing the idea last nieht."

?'Nora Mcallister she's that woman lawyer, isn't she?" commented Sally. "I wondered what you and she were ab absorbed in." She looked at him through new eyes in that moment Nora Macallister was rather attrac

tive, successful In Dick's own profession, too and now here he was advocating a matrimonial vacation! I

She wondered about mm, tor me ) first time since their marriage. She f had always taken him for granted his devotion had been as much part of him as his. steady gray eyes, or his endearing, boyish laugh, that discounted his seriousness. She had considered only the side he showed her, though she realized that, for a man of 32, he was amazingly successful, that his opinion was valued by men much older than he. What she did not know, was that he was credited with having a remarkably" magnetic personality; that while few had wondered when she turned her back on a long list of suitors and accepted him, those few had wondered, not why she had taken him, but why he had asked her to do so. "I can't decide just off hand whether your ijlans a good one or not," she told him now, her blue eyes troubled.

"And Patricia Loring a perfect modern flapper, who wants to eat her cake and have It still, with the frosting not even crumbled. Well, why

something. Get their opinions oh my method of educating a wife" "All right, I will," she told him. as she gathered up her gloves and vanity case. Automatically she crossed the

ture, the hot farm hands who made the whole house smell badly, and who ate voraciously, and Jordan, coming in and out, silent, depressing! In winter It was much worse. ' At

room and held up her cheek for his j least in warm weather, the porch w;ia

" 'How are you? Married? 'Well sort of,' she answered. 'Come and drive a bit with me.' " not talk it over with them, honey? Barbara's' made a success of marriage, and Pats thinks she knows all about it, so their advice ought to be worth

kiss; then, suddenly remembering her own recent denunciation of that pro

cedure, flushed with embarrassment and turned toward the door. "Old habits die hard, don't they, dear?" he commented, with a quizzical little laugh. . "I'm sorry," she replied, groping for words that would express her real feelings about their marriage. "I thought

we were , zomz to be ' happy; i

"Honey,' you know how, when you're looking after our garden up in the country, you have some of the plants cut back every so often, clear to the ground." He was standing at her side now .one hand on her shoulder, looking intently down into her face. "Well,

it isn t your fault, or mine, if this marriage of ours has to be cut back, is it? When it comes up again probably it will be more flourishing than ever. So run along to your tea party, and we'll make the final arrangements tonight." But her progress to Barbara Lane'e was Interrupted. For as she crossed the sidewalk to her car a very big, very blonde young man swung across her path, with a deep voice, "Hello, Sally Slade!" "Giddy-boy Gilbert!" she cried de

lightedly, as his hands caught hers in a firm grasp. ;"Why, I haven't seen you since oh, ' for years, and years! Only it's Sally Brabant now." "Married?" he asked, with sudden dejection. , "Well sort of," she answered. "It's become a marriage of inconvenience lately. Come on and drive a bit with me and I'll tell you about it." Tomorrow An Echo From the Past.

there to sit on in her scant leisure;

it gave her a sense of being free, it made her world a little broader.- She could see over the fields to a line of hills and in the hollow,, the roofs and chimneys of the tiny village showed, where the road turned on the hill below the house. In winter, they lived, for comfort

and economy, in the kitchen, which never lost the odor of past dinners. The work was less, the monotony an l

dreariness infinitely , greater. For weeks she saw no one but Jordan and the black and yellow dog. "No," Amy protested, reading her mother's thoughts from the tragedy in her eyes. "You are coming with mc You shall have that little gray bedroom that looks over the garden, and I will do over that Idiotic den next to it as your sitting room. In the country house you shall have a whole suite done Just to suit you " Mrs. . Talbot listened unmoved to the girl's description of future luxury. "You know very well Adam won't want me," she said. It. doesn't matter, I want you.' Amy's tone wa not so convincing a.3

it might be. Adam ha1 shown signs of being a tyrant mora than once. "In any case I could, -not stay if he did not like me therej" Mrs. Talbot went on. i : 4 "But mother 1'"' .want you.' Am repeated again. '"Good gracious," I don't want to live in. any house with no one to talk to ' but Adam. It burst from her." She had not meant to say it to give her feelings away so plainly as that. The mother sat 'thinking for a time, while Amy preteniled to read the paper, k Finally, each one came out of a

brown Btudy, looked up, and ther glances met. , "I Buppose I am unusually lucky in this," the mother said, "that two o' my children have married happily for Luther and Claire will be happy now, I know. If only you if only I felt half as safe about you as I do about them!" Amy sighed a little impatiently. Tomorrow- -A Climax.

The National Federation of Business and Professional Women is now represented in 47 states and has a total membership of 32,000.

The Middle Ground By MARION RUBINCAM

A NEW PROBLEM. Synopsis of Preceding Chapters.

Amy Talbot has been overworked)

for so many years that she is completely out of touch with life and new ideals. She finds that out when her son, Luther, returns to the farm with his newly married wife, Claire, and when Jane, her daughter, comes home from college. She cannot understand their new ideas, and finds them making Amy, the .youngest, discontented. Claire and Luther quarrel; Claire goep back to the city, taking Amy with her. Eventually Amy and Luther go away. ' Mrs. Talbot is so worried about h?r girls that she braves her husband's anger and goes to them in the city. imp etnvinc frtr p-rnnri nnora. and

"Perhaps you're right about my notjwiU not look at the aiway8 faithful

Knowing anytnmg or me ana xneDjck Jane ig in,love with a doctor prospect of, having a whole -year of L t her Everything in freedom is certainly fascinating!" cWta nnH trrifias the moth-

"Better take it," 'he advised, and his

smile hid the hurt in his heart. "Think "it over this afternoon, though, if you want to, and tell me tonight what you've decided. Where are you going now?" "Out to Barbara Lane's." she answered, adjusting her sable scarf. '"She and Pats Loring and I are having tea together." "Barbara Lane a sweet, old-fashioned wife, bless' her!" he mused.

Heart Problems

Dear Mrs. Thompson: I graduated from school some time ago. When I ; was in school I had ne particular use ' for girls, but in the last year I met a girl who rather attracted me. I did not tiy to rush the acquaintance farther -than speaking in the halls or

classrooms, but some months after

graduation I reopened the acquaintance by writing a letter to the girl. It was two months before she ans- . wered, but she made no apology, say

ing that the letter had been mislaid. We then exchanged several letters and I took the. liberty of calling her on the telephone and asking for a date. By letting her select the time I managed to get one and a week later . I took her to a show. Since then I have tried three times to get dates, naming the time myself each time, but I have never been able to find her

when she wasn't busy. . I know for a! fact that she has a great deal to do,'

: but I am afraid I am wasting my time ' trying to keep up the acquaintance. Do you believe I should keep on try- ' ing, or let her go? A READER. If the girl were really interested in you, she woul4 either find a way to see you at the times you suggest, or : she would tell you when she ' would , be free and in a position to see you. i I would advise you to give her up and wait until you are Interested in some one else who will also be interested " in you.

er Luther and Claire are separated;

Claire wants a divorce. Amy's pretlness attracts scores of admirers; s-he threatens to marry a rich man she does not love. Jane is on the point of going away with the doctor, who does not want to marry her. There is no sympathy between the strict and narrow ideas of the mother and the broad, but what she calls "loose" ide.13 of the children.' The doctor finds a post in a South American mining camp, and can afford to marry. He and Jane elope and go to South America. Amy and Adam Arnold, twice her age, become engaged. Dick goes to South America and Luther and Claire make up thtir quarrel. Chapter 103. Next morning, when Luther did not appear at 8 for his breakfast, Mrs. Talbot went in great alarm to Amy's room and woke her up. Amy's eyes opened wide and she laughed a little even while she was still half asleep. "It's all risht, I did it after all." she

announced, her voice still indistinct.

"Did what? What has happened?'' "I'll get up and have an early breakfast and tell you. Don't worry." and Amy slid her arms into the blue robe and began hunting for her slippers. "So it's evident they've made up and I'm responsible," Amy ended her explanation triumphantly. Mrs. Talbot sat silent for a time.

An expression of perfect peace softened and relaxed her features, which had been fairly drawn with worry when 3he found out Luther's absence. "It's what I wanted. It's too good io be true," she said finally. But she knew it was true when Luther rang up on the phone. Amy answered, and came running back to the breakfast table laughing. "Yes, it's just as I told you. They have made it up. Luther wants me to pack his things and send them around to the old apartment. They are going to stay on there." She held her cup for more coffee, and went on a little rufelly. "I seem to do nothing but pack up trunks for members of the family who are goir.p away on honeymoons," she said. "Loo says Claire gets a week's rest before the new show opens, and they are going off to the mountains and Jane

eloped to South America well, I'll ue the next to pack up and leave." "Then my duty will be done, and I'll pack up and go back." Mrs. Talbot hesitated. She would naturally hae said "home" but the house in the country where she had overworked and worried and been miserable had long ceased to be home to her. "You are going with me,' mother." Amy said. "At least I can do that much for you. You are not going back to that awful desolate hole." "When you are married, I won't be

needed any more by any of my chil-

Mrs. Talbot tried to keep her voice even, but failed. Long, blank, dreary and empty the future stretched in front of her. The farmhouse the garden work in summer and canning and preserving and weeding, and the road dust that settled over the fumi-

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PHOTOS

722 MAIN St RICHMOND! IND

Covered Buttons

Braids, Floss, Yarn, Beads, etc. For hand or machine work. LACEY'S 8 S. 9 St. Phone 1756

PurePasteurized Milk and Cream

Phone 1531 KRAMER BROS. DAIRY

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Abetter than jewels that schoolgirl complexion

Take a lesson from Cleopatra With a world of an-, cient beauty arts at her command, she depended on cleansing with Palm and Olive oils to protect, improve and preserve the freshness and smoothness of her skin. This beautifying was not confined to the face alone. The bath was a daily ceremonial with all ancient peoples, and palm and olive oils the cleansers used.

The girl with a clear, smooth skin, radiant with freshness and natural color, should leave jewels to those less fortunate, for she doesn't need them. The charm of a perfect' natural complexion at-" tracts far more than elaborate dress and ornaments. If your complexion lacks the beauty which women envy and men admire, don't depend on clothes and jewelry to draw attention from its defects. , Every woman can transform her bad complexion into a good one, for alluring freshness and clear color isn't a gift of Nature, but a matter of care. ' How to have a perfect skin No girl need be afflicted with a bad complexion, for improvement is simple and easy. Daily cleansing, gentle but thorough, is the secret. You must use soap, for nothing will remove the dirt, oil and perspiration which collects in the pores and causes most skin trouble. Choose Palmolive, because its action is soothing. Harsh soap should never be used for washing the face. , Massage the smooth, creamy lather gently into the skin until it removes all clogging deposits. Don't forget your neck and throat. They are as conspicuous as the face for any lack in beauty. Careful rinsing leaves the skin stimulated, freshened and free from the accumulation which enlarges the pores, causes blackheads and carry infection. "

Made from the Palm and Olive Oils Cleopatra Used

Do this every day There is too much dirt and dust where most of us live to make it advisable to neglect this cosmetic cleansing even for a day. Powder should be removed, and rouge, if you use it They combine with dirt and skin secretions in dangerous clogging. Dry skins are benefited by cold cream after cleansing. If unusual dryness is your trouble, apply a little before, as well as after washing. Blended from the same oils ' Palmolive Soap is blended from the same bland soothing oils which adorned the sumptuous marble baths of Egyptians, Greeks and Romans. Modern scientists, with all their research, have not been able to discover milder, more soothing, or more efficient soap ingredients. But although very expensive, the gigantic volume" in which Palmolive is produced keeps the price very low. Users profit by Palmolive popularity. . The Palmolive factories, working day and night, and the importation of the rare oils in vast quantities, allow you to enjoy this finest facial soap for the modest price of 10 cents no more than ordinary soap. THE PALMOLIVE COMPANY, Milwaukee, U.S.A. THE PALMOUVK COMPACT OF CANADA, Limbed, TORONTO, ONT ; AUo makert of eompUU tin of toiUt mrUel

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New Models New Prices BROWER AUTO SALES CO. Studebaker Dealers 21-23 S. 7th St. Phone 6019

DODGE BROTHERS Motor Cars

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SEND A PLUMBER AT ONCE! is what we hear frequently, and respond with capable, efficient workmen that will understand what to do. and the supplies to bring, if you will tell us exactly what is in need of repairs. Trips to shop will be avoided and time will be saved which is expense. We are just as anxious to save as the customer is to have us save. Just phone MEERHOFF, 1236, and Will. Billy. William or Bill will serve you promptly.

Piano Tuning Refiriishing or Repairing If your player or piano needs attention, you will want the work done by experienced men. We will be glad to take care of your work and assure you of satisfaction. The Starr Piano Go. 931-35 Main Street, Richmond '

BUY IT HERE FOR LESS Plus. Service and Quality Kahle Bros. Groceries 98 W. Main TWO 217 So. 5th Phone 3038 STORES Phone 2626 Cash Grocery Free Delivery

SAFETY SECURITY SERVICE 2nd National Bank

For your next meal, use Richmond Rose Brand MEATS and LARD Prepared by STOLLE & SONS .

LA

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Do you buy shoes

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If you don't,' read this, because we are pleased to announce the arrival of a complete line of the finest shoes made we refer to the Utz & Dunn Rochester Made Shoes that look nice, fit perfectly and NEVER lose their shape. It will do you good just to look at these shoes. Of course the best news is last. The prices are $5 to $6. ' Mail Orders Given Prompt Attention. .

Don't Wear Spotted Clothes . Send them to WILSON to be Cleaned Phones 1105-1106

TIGRAN'Q y Ladies' Shop O Agents for P. N. Practical Front Corsets

Ladies, Watch Page 3 Friday Top of Page.

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