Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 67, 20 March 1922 — Page 5

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND., MONDAY, MARCH 20, 1922.

PAGE FIVE

71 IsDife on Jovq

INEZ KLUMPH CT

HAHVUITI MEALA

I that she would have had a new frock

WHO'S WHO AND WHAT'S

oiriTiorv 5V?iSD If Andy and Bhe had not Baved all

young lawyer, has auKKeitea a year a

leave of absence for hia bored wife.

SALLY. hODlnr that she will learn

enough of life to become less a butterfly and more a helpmate. She begins by meeting a childhood friend. KEITH GILBERT, always labeled "Dangerous," while on her way to tea with BARBARA LANE, an old-fashioned wife, and PATRICIA LORING. a modern flapper who Is out to capture Gilbert and Is much surprised when at a big costume ball, che meets Rally with him and I,EP. CRAIG, a vounir woman who

has become famous for her magazine1 covers. . CHAPTER XII DRAGGING HOURS Sally was breakfasting In bed: that is, she was lounging among the crisp linen pillows, glancing through her mall, with a breakfast trav bridging her lap, and Mr. Waddle, her Pekingese puppy, curled up beside her, rolling appreciative eyes at the hot toast. . There were flowers from Gilbert, of , course long branches of pink and white dogwood lay across the coverlet, tumbling from their box. His voice came to her over the telephone while she was giving them to the maid to put In water. ? "Oh Giddy!" Her voice was not breathless with delight and surprise now when he called her, as It had been a month ago. "Lunch with you? Oh, I cant: I'm doing something else,

though I can't Just remember what it

Is. And this evening's gone too; Bar

bara Lane phoned me that her husband has a man here who's awfully important, somehow, and she begged me

to spend the evening with them, so I'll have to do it. Sorry" She was sorry, ..genuinely so, but she had felt guilty

over refusing many

of Barbara's invitations of late, and besides. It wouldn't hurt Giddy any to let him see that he

After Ten Years By MARION RUBIN6AM

their money, to put on their little

horned "Weeacre." Her anticipations

fell flat as a cold popover. She hadje d witn very falr halr; almost flax.

1 PATTY COMES Chapter 6 Patricia Parke was all that a girl recently 20 years old ought to be. On the

surface she was a slender, medium siz

LJ

Iaea Klumph

couldn't be sure of her. ' Her day whirled past In a flurry of small engagements. She must enter Mr. Waddle for a dog show to be held for charity: must see the jeweler who had sent her Jade earrings of one shade of green and a veil pin of another; must see if Henri, the French shoemaker, would make some dancing pumps for her, a meeting from which Phe retired in confusion when he told her frankly that he hadn't time to work for her; that there were too many girls who earned their living by dancing and needed his shoes, for him to bother with women who were idle. It was half-past six when Barbara Lane hurried 1 into Sally's dresing room.1 stopping in dismay as she saw

the trailing black evening gown that

the maid was slipping over the girl'3

bare shoulders. . "Oh, Sally I " her greeting was lost in her regret. "You're dressing up, arent' you and I'm In this " she looked down at her blue suit and the crisp ruffles of her blouse,' as i they had suddenly changed to something distasteful. . "That's all' right, my dear I'll change," declared Sally promptly. "Bring me that black Canton crepe, Henrietta. It was stupid of me. Barby; I never thought," she went on, slipping one arm through her friend's and leading her over to the chaise longue. "Sit here and talk to me while I finish; I shan't be-a moment. How are you?" "Oh, fine and things are going nicely with us," Barbara answered.

but it was an effort to make her voice

bright. The frock which was slipped

over Sally's head, and caught at the waistline with a. curious, narrow girdle of beaten silver made Barbara's last year's suit seem as shabby as it had been 'when contrasted with the evening gown. She had . cleaned her gloves herself, happy in anticipation of the evening's gaiety; she wanted to lake them off and stuff them into her pocket, when she saw Sally's dainty things of delicate ecru kid, with" tiny roses embroidered on the backs. In vain Barbara reminded herself

. Bally teas breakfasting in bed, toith her Pekingese puppy beside her.

looked forward so eagerly to this

treat to having dinner in town, and going to the theatre. Andy could

never have afforded it if it had not been in the Interests, of the business. But now, with Sally, sleek, beautifully cared for, making one of the party, she wished that she could run home. And when they reached the hotel where they were to meet her husband, and she saw him standing in the lobby with an erect, good-looking man beside him, she' turned hot. with humiliation. Everyone else looked so nice, and she felt so dowdy!

For Sally the evening dragged in-

terminaDiyr bne naa naa tea very

late, and had no appetite for the din

ner which Andy inexpertly ordered. She had seen the play to which they

went twice before, once on the open-! ing night, as a member of a box party, pnd again when the author took her and Keith Gilbert. Both times she had been bored. Thi3 evening it seemed more stupid than ever, and by the end of the third act she was wondering if she couldnt' 6lip away, the moment it was over and find some of the crowd at Lee's or telephone Keith and suggest that they go somewheie to dance. But her plans went awry. As they rose from their seats, Andy turned to her with a beaming smile. "Calhoun" (the other man) "has never been to the Midnight Roof let's go up for a while; shall we?" "Oh I" began Sally, but a glance at Barbara's beaming face made her pause. Obviously Barbara, who looked so pretty despite the shabbiness of

her clothes, was having a wonderful time. It would be cruel to break it off. i "Don't say you won't go!" begsred Andrew. "That'll spoil it all. Come on, Sally be a sport and come along, even if you are used to staying home nights since Dick's away." She wanted 4o scream; staying homs night since her husband was gone! But she only smiled and nodded her acquiescence, telling herself that the evening couldn't last forever. (Copyright, 1922, by The Wheeler Newspaper Syndicate).

, Did you ever see a tile bathroom smile shows yours Blue Devil Clean

ser and watch. Advertisement.

en in color, with enough wave to make

it comb easily into any desired sort of sfryle. She had, at this moment, very pretty eyes a.t this moment because she wore a gray traveling suit. In a certain evening gown of turquoise velvet, her eyes were blue as a summer sky. , She had nice features, quite like her 6lster8. There the family resemblance stopped. Patty's skin was fair,

Inclined to pallor; but when she was I happy, flushed with faint pink a pink !

so delicate it seemed to be laid on un

der the skin, as the color in equisite china seems to exist far under the fine surface. The family naturally went to meet the through train from Portland to St. Louis, which stopped on ' signal at Wissakeagan. Patty was officially

helped off by a colored porter, the only passenger to alight. Millie felt it was all quite important, and . thought of the large item that the "Local News" would print about this impressive arrival of "one of Wissakeagan's old residenters." Humphrey bundled them all Into his car, and left them . alone in Mrs.

Parke's house. They were all to have

supper together there later. "Did you have a nice trip? Tell us

all about it. Did you bring any new clothes?" Millie asked, atttaching perhaps more importance to the clothes and the Btyles than the arrival of her , sister. Patty laughed and began opening trunks. "Heaps," she said. "You see, the j Portland trip was a quick one. I i

bought all of us the latest Spring fashions in New York." She began bringing them out, a blouse cut in an entirely new way which Millie declared the very thing for her new skirt, a net shawl studded

with glistening beads for her mother, who had passion for little wraps and

shawls, hats and gloves and silk stock- J

mgs witn openwork clocks in fact, a varied assortment of silly feminine things which delighted both women. Millie was not envious until Patty's own things came out. She had so many dresses and they were all so charming and so different from anything Wissakeagan had seen! "You must have been making a lot of money as a traveling companion," Millie commented admirably, wondering if Bhe could send her another dress like the blue ,velvet. Patty laughed again. "I didn't. I spent most of my money on you and mother. My clothes are made over from Grainger-Munn's old things. You see, when she went in mourning for Mary, she put away all her colored clothes. Iast winter she gave them to me and I've made them over." Millie ceased to be envious. After all, these lovely gowns were only second hand! She began to feel slightly patronizing toward Patty, since the herself could always afford to buy things quite brand new. But Patty was quite oblivious to all this. Millie was anxious to have a long talk with her sister. But she did not have the opportunity until the following day, when she ran over to see her. She wore the Charmuese skirt by way of impresing Patty that after all Wissakeagan produced some fashionable things. ' V "Cora is coming to lunch, she said.

"She'll want to see all your New : quickly when by a very Blmple treat-

York clothes, of course. But you , ment they might entirely overcome

musm t ten ner msi iuej cs,bigu to you or that you made from somebody's old clothes." Patty turned a pair of very astoniBher grey eyes upon her sister. Then her usual way out of embarassing difficulties she bgan to laugh. "Wouldn't be likely to tell her so, since after all It's none of her affair," she remarked. "As for old clothes, I don't believe Mrs. Munn wore them more than once, some of them not at all. v ; "You see, Mary died a little over a year ago. Just after her mother got back from Paris with some of these things and with a whole wardrobe for Mary herself. She would not give me those things; of course she said it would hurt her to know they were being worn by anyone else. She had them

Durnt. i "I want to know more about iiary.

Your letters were so short. But what Millie wanted mostly was to talk about herself. And looking from the window watching Cora, sue saw her own husband coming up to the house. ; "I haven't seen near enough of little sister," he boomed out as he entered

the room. "So I've come up to eat with you. Hello, Millie you don't look overjoyed." A sudden tiny dart of jealousy, though her own sister, had come into Millie's heart. 1 Tomorrow Growing Jealousy

this weakness.

This treatment is nothing more than binding the foot and ankle with what is known as a rest strap.; This consists of a piece of court plaster about three or. four inches wide and 18 inches to three feet long. When the ankle has been strained or weakened, usually the result of a fall, it is apt to bend so the weight of the body, instead of being distributed equally over the foot, comes mostly on the big toe

joint and the inner part of the heel. If you step on the floor with a wet foot you can tell this by the damp impression the foot makes, Normally the toes, the ball of the .foot, the heel and the outer line of the foot show. But if the arch has fallen or. the ankle is weak, almost the whole sole of the foot will rest upon the floor and make Its impresion. j To correct this, take a Btrap of ad-i

hesive plaster, put it under the foot Immediately in front of the heel. Bring it up' over the instep, around the outer part of the ankle, and then bind it around the ankle as much as its length permits. This will draw this foot back into proper position, and it will not be in the least uncomfortable. It will afford the foot and ankle ample rest and support and should be kept on for about a week.

All Inquiries addressed to Mrs. Forbes In care of the "Beauty Chits" department will be answered In' these

columns in their turn. Thla requires considerable time, however, ovrtng to the great number received. So, if a personal or quicker reply Is dejlred, a stamped and self -addressed envelops must be endowed with the question. file Editor.

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NEW RUGS WELDON'S

Beauty Chats By Edna Kent Forbe,

f t """""""" 1

Formerly Reed Furniture Co.

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This is for strained ankles. A great many people have not sprained ankles but strained ankles and do not know it. Some people go for years wondering why their feet and ankles tire out so easily, depriving themselves of such pleasures as skating, tennis playing or tramping be

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Newest Footwear Modes for Easter and After The story of Spring Shoe styles is really a collection . of varied short stories, for there are correct styles for each occasion and many variations for every purpose. A few random notes will point out the "highlight's." Patent leather, satin and suede are much wanted. Straps continue their popularity in many ways. There are a great many low heels. Black patent and grey suede often combine. The "pored pumps" are exceedingly chic. Sports shoes appear in many variations. Oxfords, or strap pumps for walking. Lower prices prevail throughput. All of which can give you but tho briefest idea of the completeness and variety of the assortment which awaits you. .

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Wedding Silver

Silver again this Spring predominates as the ideal wedding gift. We have just recently received many attractive pieces in Sheffield Ware, as well as Knives, Forks and Spoons and complete che'sts or sets of silver. Our courteous ' salespeople will gladly assist you in selecting the gift that will meet with the approval of all concerned. t Jenkins & Go. 726 Main St.

The Joys That white teeth bring

Millions of people have found them out in this delightful way. This is to urge that you do so and now.

Combat the film

zt

Your teeth are coated with a viscous film.

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Both are embodied in a "new-day tooth paste called Pepsodent for twice-daily application. Able authorities have proved its efficiency. Now leading dentists, almost the world over, are advising its adoption. Five new effects Pepsodent combats that film with every application. It keeps teeth highly polished, so film less easily adheres. It multiplies, also, the salivary flow Nature's great tooth-protecting agent. It multiplies the starch digestant in saliva, to digest starch deposits that cling. It multiplies the alkalinity of the saliva, to neutralize the acids which cause tooth decay. Twice daily it brings these five desired effects. And modern authorities say the tooth paste should bring them. , Watch these effects and Judge them for yourself. Send the coupon for a 10-Day Tube. Note how clean the teeth feel after using. Mark the absence of the viscous film. See how teeth whiten as the, film-coats' disappear. Judge by the benefits you feeL Judge by what your mirror shows. Then decide if you should join the millions who now clean teeth in this way. Cut out the coupon now.

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The Italian Renaissance Period is the latest and most popular conception for the bedroom. This beautiful Suite is something really new and different, both in design and finish. It's built along graceful and artistic lines, "nifty" in every detail and is mod

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An Unusual Value -- with H especially interesting terms '; We are pricing this" Suite for a quick turnover in two combinations four pieces, consisting of a 52-inch Dresser, 40-inch Chif robe, Bow Bed and 44-inch Dressing Table at $280.00; or three pieces, consisting of a 44-inch Service Vanity Dresser, 40-inch Chif robe and Bow End Bed at $197.60; or 52-inch Dresser, 40-inch Chifxobe and Bed at $218.60- x We i s s F u r nit u re Store

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