Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 270, 13 November 1922 — Page 5
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND., MONDAY, NOV. 13, 1922.
PAGE FIVE.
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by Marion Rnbincam
Synopsis of Preceding Chapl
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Beauty Chats By Edna Kent Forbes
Pandora Mcbolson is bo painfull
tera ilntull
jhy that when she meets new people she can think of nothing to eay to them, and never knows what to d. with her hands or feet. She lives as a poor relation with her Aunt Maude her Uncle Peter and their very popular daughter, Gladys all of whom tell her frequently that she is hopelessly stupid and queer. She has only one friend, Morton, shy like herself, whom she loves devotedly. When Gladys, who has everything, suddenly marries Morton, Pan fancies herself heartbroken. She goes to New York to live with
uiona Uates, a brilliant erratic woman, whose little son, Frankle, she takes care of. Among kindlier people Pan begins to find herself. She finds she really cares for Gloria's friend.
George, who goes with them that sum
mer to Europe. In Europe, Gloria, now a widow, marries Santley Collins, leaving Pan in charge of .Frankie.
George who has been in France re
turns to London. He has been in
love with Pan all the time and asks her to marry him. She consents, they
are married and return to New York,
taking along little Frankie
THE NEW PAN Chapter 103
George had said, when they first returned to the studio: "I suppose we'll
move, we won't have enough room here." . At which Pan turned round, surprised eyes on him. "Room!' There's oceans of It! After months in Gloria's tiny flat and more months In hotel suites " "This seems buge, does it? Well, wait and see, your ideas will soon expand." - And when Pan asked him what he based that assumption upon, he. could only answer that in his friends' experiences, "they always did."
"Most women want a huge place to entertain and more clothes than they can wear and all the fuss and feathers of life. And the more money they have, the bigger the splash they liks to make with it." "I don't. If what you say is true, I'm not like most women." Pan answered with,a impudent little smile at him. "We'll see!" George laughed. "You are awful feminine, you know. Pan, and you did secretly rejoice over my defeat on our wedding plans." "That was because I always wanted white satin gown with tiny pearls and orange blossoms, and mine was a dream,", she answered. "I couldn't have worn it if we hadn't had a regular wedding. But that doesn't prove I'm like most women." "You're much nicer," the man said, half teasing, half tender. "Where are you off to now? Aren't you going to come and kiss me goodbye first?" "I'm going to take Frankie to a school near here, where Gloria always intended to have him go," Pan told him. "Then I'm going to Gloria's office to see if there's anything I can handle for her, and I'll be home to see that you have a nice luncheon." George, seated high up on his painter's stool, detained her gently with an arm around her shoulders, until ;t small bored voice from the doorway asked: "Pan, aren't you ever coming?" And Pan laughed and slipped away. George heard them chattering togethe' down the hall, and then the door closed and he was left alone again in the great-studio with his perfectly correct butler and his severely correct maid, just as he had been in his bachelor days. The perfect quiet of the place, once soothing to him and an inducement to work, rather worried him now. He liked to hear his wife's quick little foosteps as she went back and forth on the great numbers of small things she always was finding to di. He even liked the shrill little voice
and restless pattering feet of the beloved intruder, Frankie. Still, he couldn't work, though he sad several things to do, so he began cleaning brushes and palettes and sorting out bent and daubed tubes of.collors, and examining frames and canvases, and so kept himself beautifully busy until the one o'clock luncheon As for Pan, she trotted down Madison Avenue to a boy's school and ens tered Frankie, feeling very grown up and motherly as 6he inquired about
prices and courses of lessons, hours of recreation and such things, and decided he should have French at once, though It was an "extra," because languages were so Important an 3 should be taught young. Then, with the excited Frankie stiU walking beside her. she went to Gloria's office, closed for the summer while she was away. Her old stenographer was to come once a week, sort the mail and forward the Import
ant letters, but that Irresponsible young lady had found herself another position long since, and had decided to
"chuck" this once-a-week errand which
meant only a little extra money. So the mail was lying in a pyramid on the floor inside the door. Pan ttiought it might be fun to spend two hourse a day In the office assorting and answering and getting things straight for Gloria's return. This plan she carried out faithfully. "Ill drop "Frankie off at school anl go on down there," she told George. "Then I'm in the shopping centre, so if I've errands I'll do them then and collect Frankie again on my way homi for lunch." Which excellent plan kept her occupied - all morning. George thought it a good idea, for Pan had nothing to do otherwise. "Interests will come as we settle down here together," he said. fPeople
are drifting back to town, you'll have a certain amount of social duties, you know" he looked at her half doubtfully. She seemed so young to have the responsibilities of house and husband, let alone those of social life in a big city, where iniative meant much. "I don't want you to be bord," be added, thinking that Pan, who wa always too passive, would go when people asked her and stay home when they didn't. , "Bored ! When I see you everyday?' she asked with a little Incredulous laugh. And she did keep herself happy and busy during the long hours when George shut himself up to work. Pan was changing. She was becoming a new sort of person.
I
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should say, from one-eighth to onequarter as much tar as oil. When the scalp is thoroughly covered let the tar stay . on for. about ten minutes. Then begin to wash using very hot water and good soap. Castile soap or cocoanut oil soap is always best and particularly good if melted to
a liquid. Use the soap several times. Rinse well. Bobbie It is quite a common occurrence to have the ends of the hair dry up and split after a summer's exposure to strong sunshine. Braid the hair in many small braids and then ruff out the ends by loosening the
plaits. Clip or singe these broken ends. Repeat this procedure every week until you have finally caught most of them. 'Kitty T. When the hands and feet are inclined to get cold it shows that your circulation is defective and that you are possibly in need of building up. Aid to counteract this tendency
by keeping the feet warm overnight, even though you must take a hot water bag to bed; or wear very loose woolenstockings during the night. Wealthy land owners in Arabia,heretofore satisfied with old and primitive methods, are beginning to adoptideas of scientific farming. '
Heart Probl
ems
Dear Mrs. Thompson: I am seventeen years old and am engaged to be married this Christmas. Please tell me whether you would suggest a suit or nice dress for my wedding, four feet nine inches in height and a few of my friends say I am too short to look well in a suit. But I am anxious to get the suit. Mother says she would rather have me get a nice dress but that I can suit myself. I have never had a suit. PUELXA. PARVA You want the suit more than you do the dress, and therefore you should have it. If you are slim there's no reason why the suit .will ' not look well, but if you are heavy it will probably make you look fatter and shorter. Your choice should depend a good deal on your dequirements after man-age. If you wll need a dress badly then you really ought to get one instead of a suit, but if you feel a suit will meet your requirements even more than a dress, of course it would be wise to decide in favor oi the suit ' .
A tar application cures dandruff. One of the very best treatments for a stubborn case of dandruff is a tar application. Some beauty shops sell tar preparations in bottles all ready to be applied to the scalp. If you can get these you will find them convenient and not very expensive. If you cannot, however, you can fix the tar for yourself. Buy a little bit of just ordinary black sticky tar. One woman I know gets it from a builder and roofer, though most drug stores will carry it in some usable
form. Heat a few ounces of olive oil, as much as will almost fill the bottle you decide to use for tar. Add the tar to the hot oil and stir with a small stick until it melts and blends. I can't give you exact proportions, so much depends on the thickness or stickiness of the tar that you've bought. The result will be a black looking mass of
about the consistency of thick syrup. This should be kept and used as needed. When ready for the shampoo pour a little tar mixture into a warm saucer and dip into it an old toothbrush. Part the hair and rub the brush along the parting. Part the hair in another place a few inches away and rub again. Do this until you have completely covered your scalp with the tar preparation. It will wash off because you have used only a small amount of tar to a large amount of olive oil. ' These proportions are, I
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Opp. Post Office
Phone 1655
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1021 Main
