Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 207, 31 August 1922 — Page 3
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THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND., THURSDAY, AUG. 31, 1922.
Gripping questions these fearlessly asked and fearlessly answered by such far-famed people as Lady Astor, Gifford Pinchot, Mrs. O. H. P. Belmont, Barton W. Gurrie, Charles A. Selden, Douglas Fairbanks, Josephine Daskam Bacon. No publication strikes so vigorously and understandingly at the roots of the American woman's problems as The Ladies' Home Journal the mother's worry over her jazz-mad children; the club woman's ambition for civic and artistic betterment; the woman voter's energetic efforts to clean house politically; the tired home-maker's need for inspiration and entertainment. You cannot afford to miss the 194-page September issue, with its wealth of stories, articles and helpful features. Buy it to-day before your news-dealer's supply is exhausted.
IADY ASTOR, the American-born Peeress, J strikes without fear at the Fashions of Today and describes her own wardrobe. Charles A. Selden begins a series of articles full of constructive suggestions on EDUCATING ILLITERATE AMERICA. Josephine Daskam Bacon gives her impressions of the WOMEN'S CLUB FEDERATION meeting and some of the notable figures at the Biennial. MRS. O. H. P. BELMONT writes on Women as Dictators and tells how she was ostracized by society, first because of her divorce and later her suffrage fight. GIFFORD PINCHOT, next Governor of
Pennsylvania, exults that the women nominated him and helped him overthrow boss rule. DOUGLAS FAIRBANKS takes you with him while he makes his new film, Robin Hood, and prophesies the future of the motion pictures. BOOTH TARKINGTON presents his latest one-act comedy, written especially for the Journal, which your Club may put on without charge. BARTON W. CURRIE, Editor of the Journal, writing from actual observation here and abroad, contrasts conditions in Wine-Soaked Europe and Dry America a stirring indictment of rum.
FICTION, lots of it. Serials by JOSEPH C. LINCOLN of Cape Cod fame, and George Weston and jOlaf Baker. Mr. Baker's Dusty Star is different from anything you have ever read. Unusual short stones by such favorites as EDITH BARNARD .LANO, Roland Pertwee, Frances Noyes 'Art, Sarah Addington. WHY GROW OLD? - Ethel Lloyd Patterson in this installment exposes the secrets of the beauty parlors. FASHION pages feature the fall bride and tell you how to buy or make your autumn wardrobe. HOUSEHOLD pages overflow with recipes and with time and money savers.
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