Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 232, 29 September 1922 — Page 3

PAGE THREE IE wBamroschMacle the The Mother Story of .our (an vvomen vvorii iflionesi With the Political Bosses ? feat iiszt Weep ' eates? Man, w mvasa v. doe

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND., FRIDAY, SEPT. 29, 1922.

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How are you going to vote this fall? With the political bosses or against them? Can women reform the political machines from the inside? Can they really accomplish anything without them? These vital questions on which every woman should have an opinion are discussed by Harriet Taylor Upton, vice-chairman of the Republican National Executive Committee.

What Charlie Chaplin thinks

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as' Job

Are you tired of the sugary heroines, conventional movie plots and sentimental fade-outs? Charlie Chaplin proves himself a real student of the film in telling why the movies must throw out the sort of pictures now being produced. Also, he has a delightful account of how he gets his ideas for his own pictures.

How

ecame

Psalmist

On

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e oi tee Greatest Poets

Job, Solomon's Song, the Psalms by William Lyon Phelps. Why Grow Old? by Ethel Lloyd Patterson. Silhouette Photographs of the Childrenby Alice Van Leer Carrick. When Your Home is Not Good Enough for You by Sarah D. Lowrie. The Last Hour by Grace Richmond.

Would you like to know the famous musicians who gave America her musical culture? Walter Damrosch, leader of the New York Symphony Orchestra, has written a fascinating series of reminiscences, beginning this issue, full of sparkling anecdotes of the musicians, composers and opera singers he has .known in the forty years of his musical career.

What You Can Do for the Siyeat-ShoplWer Elizabeth Frazer begins a series of articles outlining a definite program by which women with the vote can better the condition of millions of their sisters chained to the wheels of industry. No woman's club or political-study class should neglect serious consideration of these articles as a basis for effective political action.

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onest Education

The school of the future will giv3 individual attention to your child. No holding down the bright boy to the slower pace set by the dull ones. Taking each boy and girl separately and making them think about their life work. Charles A. Selden describes the amazing housecleaning in education that America has actually started upon and what you can do to help.

The former editor of The Ladies' Home Journal tells a hitherto unpublished story of mother love and inspiration in the boyhood of our greatest American, portraying vividly one of those crucial but rarely chronicled moments that make history. Full of the deep, rich understanding of motherhood, it is a story that every woman will . treasure.

If Ttou love Puppies, Mm

lemunes lw btovy The author rof the Lad stories the most popular dog stories that ever were written is writing for The Journal a new series about puppies. Dynamite is the firstone the story of a collie pup whose playfulness led him into a magnificent adventure and made a happy romance. It is told with all of Albert Payson Terhune's skill.

The iLiiile Bog Who Couldn't Sleep -and Otiber Stories

Sophie Kerr Hedge Rose. Clifton Lisle Raheela Colleen. Frances Noyes Hart Noel. Ian Hay The "Liberry." Eleanor Hallowell Abbott The Little Dog Who Couldn't Sleep. Joseph C. Lincoln Fair Harbor. George tWeston A Ticket for Adventure. Olaf Baker Dusty Star.

These are scarcely half of the more than fifty features that make up the big 220-page October issue of THE LADIES' HOME JOURNAL on sale today. The Journal is, and has been for almost 40 years, the favorite periodical of millions of women. It has kept steady pace with the changing and broadening interests of the American woman. To her literally by the millions it has brought a new understanding of the problems that confront her as a mother and home-maker a professional worker, a club woman, or in her new and glorious task of political housecleaning. And withal, it has consistently brought to her the best fiction of our time.

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If A B. I . E S- 9

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