Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 244, 13 October 1922 — Page 5
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, 1ND., FRIDAY, OCT. 13, 1922.
PAGE FIVE
vl by Marion Rubin cam
PARIS Chapter 77 For the next several days, Pan had little time to worry over herself oi Gleria either. Gloria kept them ail ' too busy. Though George had plenty of things to keep him in London, he dropped them and followed Gloria to Paris. To Pan, this was proof positive that ha was in love. George was different too. Most of his cynicism was gone, the little expression of amused doubt and distrust that was so characteristic of his face in the early days of the winter, was al most entirely absent. George, when h looked at Gloria, showed nothing buc affection and pity. They struck a cold wind on the Channel and a rough choppy sea. The train people who had started off so gaily on a delightful morning, became transformed suddenly into pale, bedraggled looking tourists who huddled under rugs wherever the deck afforded shelter, who lay back in limp attitudes and eeemed the last word in misery.
t,ven Pan, who had not had a touch
of sea sickness on the ocean, retired to the women's lounge at Georee's sug
gestion, where she lay on a cretonne I
coucn and stared unhappily at a port hole above her head, whose gay cu.--taln flapped outwards and dropped back again, with every eidewise rolling of the boat. "George says the seventh wave Is always the worst," Frankie reported coming in to see how she was doing. "We went over a big one that tim. It's just like being in the road-mending machine, isn't it, and going over big lumps, in the road?" Pan didn't dare answer. She managed to nod and lay still, thinking how useless she was to the world in gener
al and Gloria in. particular, and wondering whether she would ever be the tame again. Just then her misery was most acute i he water became calm. They were entering tho breakwater at Calais. And the misery departed as euddenly and inexplicably a.? it had come, and she sat up, feeling very foolish and very much ashamed. Other passen gers were doing the same, past unhapplness still in their glazed eye3. "Your hair looks funny," Frankie ob iiprved. "Come along, we're thfre." And just as instantly as they had b3 come limp wrecks, the various passengers hepan to smile and revive, and when thty were through the cuytoma, they went chattering into the station restaurant and ordered uncheons and wine. , "I never though I'd want anytihng to eat again," Pan remarked as she ate omelette and asparagus. "Yes, it's the worst thing in the world, it's more acute than a toothache or a broken heart," Gloria sail lightly. It's worst of all because it has no piemen' of tragedy. It's only a joke, but dreadful while it lasts." " In Paris, Gloria had one of her sudden attacks of economy and put them all in a tiny hotel one, it happened, where she knew the porprietress, a chubby old lady who welcomed Gloria as a daughter and Frankie as a lost grandchild, telling him in voluahla French,-that she last saw him in his mother's arms. She would be delight cd to look after him while the ladies shopped. So, sometimes with Gloria, who was now earnestly buying . furniture and hangings and embroideries, and some
times with Frankie, Pan explored Paris. She found, as is the sad. fat-3 of so many Americans in reaching that city of varied delights, that her schooi French was perfectly useless. She could not even understand the chubby Madame Rollande when that lady spoke very slowly. As for the conversation on the streets, it was a mad jumble of syllables. "Your mother knows what they're Faying, though," she observed sadly to Frankio, after asking a policeman the way to their hotel and not knowing a word of his answer. "Oh yes," said Frankie cheerfully. "Mother knows every language, I suppose." iie believed it. For Gloria, if she was a bad mother according to Xorris City standards, had accomplished ono thing which few mothers achieve, and the Xonis City type of mothers never at all he had made herself a great
heroine in the eyes of her small son. Gloria was the most lovable, facinating, amusing and dazzling of personages to the child a feeling he was to carry all through his life. Together the girl and the child explored the Louvre, seeing that mosr amazing collection of old masters there, Pan still too ignorant to know the very good from the mediocre buf standing in religious awe before some masterpiece of Leonardo or Raphael, and not knowing how the mood of worship came over her. Together they wandered the streets, climbed the Eiffel Tower in the series of elevators this to Frankie's intense delight, journeyed to the palace of Versailleb, where Pan read Frankie stories o Louis the XIV to improve his mind walked often to the Arc de Triomphe where they could see almost the whole city from its radiating avenues, and rested when exhausted, at the Bois de Boulonge where Frankie played in the woods and Pan sat quietly and read. In the evenings, with George and Gloria she dined and went to plays and the opera, and home exhausted, to sleep as soon as she touched the pillow. Gloria gave them no time to be un
happy. Tomorrow A Return
Heart Problems
Game Law Booklet Free to all Huntsmen
The open season is at hand and
every man who would fare forth with a gun on his shoulder should know when, where and what he may kill without coming into conflict with the game warden.
The Government, through the Bio
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man, anywhere, everything he needs to know on this subject. This is a free Government publication and our Washington Information Bureau will secure a copy for any reader who fills out and mails the coupon below. Enclose two cents in stamps for- return postage. Write your name and address clearly. (Do not send th eoMpon t Th T.'. Isdfum. Man It direct to Washington. D. C.)
Washington, D. C. Frederic J. Haskin. Director, The Richmond Palladium Information Bureau. I enclose herewith two cents in stamps for return postage on a free copy cf the Game Laws Booklet.
Dear Mrs. Thompson: I have two
children and they are always gettin? bumped and needing iodine on the
sore places. Often I stain my own j
hands taking care of them. Can you tell me what will remove iodine? JUST MA. Ammonia will remove iodine stain from your hands. Dear Mrs. Thompson: I am a woman forty-nine years old. A few weeks ago my niece got angry at me and I want to make, up with her. Should I go to her myself and tell her, or Fhould I wait for her to make up with me? It was all her iault that she got mad. I surely think a lot of her children. I washed there this summer and did her work for her and then she turned me out. I would like to make up and
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RESURRECTS ANCIENT DITTIES TO PLEASE OLD-FASHIONED DAD
From the New York Sun. The singer who warbled "I cannot ing the old songs, I do not know the words," would be put to shame by the repertoire of a certain girl who, just to please her dad can sing a raft of old ditties that were popular before she was born. Her dad is a vaudeville fan, has been one all his life, has an ear that catches a tune like a sea lion catching a fish, and can sing every song he ever heard. He holds that the old songs are the best songs, just as old friends are the best friends, and old wine but that is too tantalizing. And his daughter, although in every other direction she believes in everything new. whether it is true or. not, agrees with her dad about old songs. How many can recall even the melodies of the following: "I guess I'll Have to Telegraph My Baby" that is about the first song George M. Cohan ever wrote, and he was 9 years old when he wrote it; "I'm Lookin' for That Bully" May Irwin was already a heavy weight when she sang that song Charles Trevathan wrote for her; "I Don't
Want to Play in Your Yard;" Patii! Rosa sang it and most of the folks were children when Patti Rosa died. "We Never Speak as We Pass By" antedated "After the Ball" by ten years! "She Was a Soldier's Sweetheart," about 1867, revived in the
Spanish War period; "Mammy's Little Alabama Coon," Josephine, My Jo" and "Hello My Baby" the last just a little younger than the telephone itself "Gondoliers Gay," a hit with Haverly's Minstrels; "My Jack's Come Home Today," "The Tar's Farewell" and "Sweet Dreamland Faces" a raging waltz hit about 1SS7. "In Old Madrid" revived last year after a Rip Van Winkle of some thirty-five years; "That Minstrel Man of Mine," 1S90, and "Blue Berry Pie," about 1870; "Go to Sleep. My Baby," Fritz Emmett. about 18SS; "Sweet Evalyna," 1865; "Billy Boy," still a popular nursery song after seventyfive years. "Nelly Gray," 1850; "Ossian's Seranade,'MS40; ."Sweet Belle Mahone," "Daisy Dean" and t'Nellie Was a Lady" a typical coon song -written just a half century before the coon song craze of 1902; "Mary and John," "In
a Cottage by the Sea," "Old Undo Snow" these and hundreds of others forgotten or half forgotten will bring back memories to many of the old folk as songs theysang or their grandmothers sang.
HOME GROWS TO SUIT THE OCCUPANT The oyster enlarges its home as its increasing size demands. It throws out a secretion of animal matter and
carbonate of lime which clings to th shell and runs over the edges so thai as the oyster grows the shell gradui ally becomes larger and thicker.
State
I would love to go back and see th-J
children. What should I do? H. E. M.
Since you want to go back and make peace, I would advise you to
do so. Of course if you try to convince your niece that she was wrong, she will get even more angry an! your visit will avail nothing. When you go back take some little peace offering, a bouquet of flowers, a glass of jelly, or candy for the children. Kiss her and tell her you love her toj much to let anger stand between you. Probably she will be just as glad t make up as you are.
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