Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 42, Number 304, 2 November 1917 — Page 10
PAGE TEN
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, FRIDAY, NOV. 2, 1917
, - r . ! . Heart and Home Problems
Dear Mrs. Thompson: I am a married women twenty-eight years old. though I look much younger. My husband is a very capable man, but when we were married I had a few hundred dollars in the savings bank and I left it there where the interest accumulated until now it amounts to quite a nice little sum. Prices have been so high lately that my hus band's salary does not go as far as it , used to. and we are running behind in our expenses and are in debt. My husband wants me to draw out some of the money to pay these debts, but I don't want to do it now. What would you advise me to do? HAPPY WIFE. I would advise you to try to be a little more economical and saving in your expenditures and save enough that way to pay your debts. It would be a very bad idea for you to take the little savings you have out of the bank You can make a small salary go a long ways if you use good judgment ana ir you have been getting along for these years without touching your savings account you can continue to do it in spite of the high prices. It is worth making the effort for at least. Dear Mrs. Thompson: (1) .If a girl and her friend go to a show and he pays for the tickets, after the show should she offer him the money for her ticket? (2) What would be a nice gift for a boy a- Christmas? f3) How long should a couple go together before they get married? DOTTY DIMPLES. (1) No, it is not necessary for her to offer to pay for her ticket. Earlham Students Raise $2,100 For War Relief Work Exceeding Earlham's quota by $100, the students of the college raised $2,100 when a campaign was launched at the chapel exercises to raise $2,000 to be used for the Y. M. C. A. war lelief work in connection with the Btate campaign to raise, $50,000 among Etudents. W. O. Trueblood, pastor of the First Friends church, of Indianapolis, Professor Lawrence Hadley, Ralph Nicholson, J. I. Parker, state student Y. M. C. A. secretary, were present and made addresses. All the reports are not in as several members of the faculty were out of the city. PENNY FAMINE SEEN WASHINGTON, Nov. 2. Penny hoarding and small coin savings banks were placed on the official faboo list today by Raymond T. Baker, director of the mint, who declares the country is threatened with a severe fchortage of cents, dimes and other email "change" for the approaching Holiday shopping season. City Statistics Daths and Funerals. BULL The funeral of Mrs.. Elisabeth . Bull, 40 years old, who died Thursday morning in Indianapolis, will be held Saturday morning at 9 Some New Things for the Baby. 21S6 Iufant's Set. consisting of a Dap, a Sack, a Night Gown and a Dress. ' , Muslin, cambric, flannel or flannelette will do nicely for the night gown, trhile lawn or nainsook is suitable for Ihe dress, with embroidery, tucking ind lace or edging for decoration. The tack will look well in silk, cashmere, lannel, or flannelette, and the cap is mitable for lawn, silk or "all-over" fm'oroidery. For the dress of flounc- . n. it will require 1 yard of 36-inch naterial with 1V1 yard of plain material for yoke and sleeves. Of nainsook r lawn 36 inches wide it will require il yards. The gown will .require 2 H rards of 24 or 27-inch material. The tap, -2' yard of IS-inch material. The lack requires yard of 27-inch material. A pattern of this Illustration mailtd to any address on receipt of 10 ients in silver or stamps. Name ,.... .... . , v ... . . v . Address . . -j . . . . City ..... . ,... ......... Size . Address Patten Department, Pal)-
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(2) Ualeaa she is engaged to him, she shouldn't give him anything. There are quite a lot of nice gifts' to make a boy; for instance, books, candy, neckwear, scarf, etc. (3) They ought to have know each other well for a couple of years at least. .."' Dear Mrs. Thompson: I have been going with a boy for six weeks and now he shows me by every action that he loves me dearly. I am only eighteen and too young to marry, but I
want to be engaged to him and be his only sweetheart. . Do you thmk that he will propose to me if I am loving and sweet to him? It will break my heart if he doesn't. Please tell me what to do to gain his love. ISABELL The boy may like you and enjoy your company, and if he is attractive and gentlemanly you will enjoy being with him, but you are too young to become engaged or to think of being his only sweetheart. If he loved you he -ould tell you so and he may do it when he thinks you are old enough to know your own mind. At present it is better for you not to. encourage him. but be natural and do what is right and love will come to you when it is time for it. Dear Mrs. Thompson: I have a ' small oil stove that 1 bought last year when it was so cold. It is very convenient, but it gives off an odor when it burns and the wick is alway needing trimming. Do you know how I could fix the stove to make it odorless? HOUSEKEEPER. You might take the wick out of the stove and clean it with gasoline but j be sure to let all of the gasoline evapI orate before touching a match to it again. That will clean out any dirt.! There are stoves made now without wicks and these are very convenient and odorless and smokeless. A poor oil stove is very unsatisfactory, and if you can afford it get rid of the one you have and purchase one of the improved kinds you will find that it is worth the difference. o'clock at . the St. Andrew's Catholic church. Rev. Father Frank Roell will be in charge. Burial in St. Andrew's cemetery. Friends may call any time. lovely White Skin! Strain lemon juice well before mixing and massage face, neck, arms, hands. By all means, girls, prepare a lemon lotion to keep your skin flexible and young looking. You will soon realize that true loveliness does not mean the powdery-look or waxen colorles3ness of some hot-house flower, but is typified by the velvety softness of your skin, your peach-like complexion and rosy-white hands. f At the cost of a small jar of ordinary cold cream one can prepare a full quarter pint of the most wonderful lemon skin softener and complexion beautifier, by squeezing the juice of two fresh lemons into a bottle containing three ounces of orchard white. Care should be taken to strain the juice through a fine cloth so no lemon pulp gets in, then this lotion will keep fresh for months. Every woman knows that lemon juice is used to remove such blemishes as freckles, sallowness and tan, and is the ideal skin softener, smoothener and beautifier. Just try it! Get three ounces of orchard white at any pharmacy and two lemons from the grocer and make up a quarter pint of this sweetly fragrant lotion and massage it daily into the face, neck, arms and hands. It should naturally help to whiten, soften, freshen and btfng out the roses and hidden beauty of any skin. It is simply marvelous to smooth en rough, red hands.
SATURDAY AND SUNDAY SPECIAL Full pound Chocolate Bitter Sweets for only
Eleven Women Get Certificates For Home Care of Sick
Certificates were received by eleven Richmond women Friday, who successfully passed the examination for elementary hygiene and home care of the sick, conducted some weeks ago at the Reid Memorial Hospital by Miss Kemper, who has charge of the day nursery and is a graduate nurse. The papers were 6ent to the Red Cross headquarters in Washington and graded . The members of the class were Mrs. Elbert Shirk, Miss Clara Comstock, Miss Margaret Starr, Miss Almira Kempton. Mrs. Frank Druitt, Miss Meb Culbertson, Miss Vivian King, Miss Margaret Mooney, Miss Martha Scott, Mrs. John Clements and Miss Mary Clements. Court Records Marriage Licenses Levi S. Dilling, minister, Hagerstown, Ind., and Amanda Widdows, housekeeper, Hagerstown. Friends Fear for M issionary's Safety in Japan Tornado Colwell S. Miller, former Earlham college student, whose home is in Williamsburg, Ind., is believed to have been lost in a tornado that swept over Japan several weeks ago. Miller is a missionary sent to Tokio under the direction of the Chicago Y. M. C. A., and was in Tokio at the time of the tornado. Letters sent by his father, John Miller, of Williamsburg, have been returned by Tokio officials and aside from a few Japanese characters there were no marks on them. Miller was for several years a teacher in Hagerstown and Williamsburg High schols and has been in Japan about a year. He had planned to return to this country next March. FEEGER SPEAKS AT BIG REFORMATION OBSERVANCE Luther M. Feeger, of Richmond, was one of the principal speakers at the All Protestant celebration, held in Grand Rapids, Mich., Wednesday and Thursday. Mr. Feeger spoke before 7,000 people on the subject of "Democracy in the Church." The celebration was held in honor of the four hundredth anniversary of the Reformation. BIBLE STUDY CLASSES OF Y. M. C. A. TO HAVE DINNER Bible study classes of the Y. M. C. A. will give a dinner Monday evening. Nov. 5 at the Y. Members of the Bible classes formed last spring are invited to attend. After the dinner new classes will be formed. Rev. Frank A. Dressel of First English Lutheran church, will preside and make the address. Seventy-five guests have been invited. . - BOARD HAS LUNCHEON The executive committee of the Friends' Foreign Mission board held its regular meeting Friday at the Y. M. C A. when a luncheon was a feature. Rev. Charles Woodman of the West Richmond Friends church, vice president of the board, presided. BRITISH AIRPLANES ATTACK GERMAN MUNITION FACTORIES LONDON, Nov. 1. German munition factories in Bavaria have been attacked by British airplanes, a substitute of the statement issued tonight says. British airmen also dropped bombs on German billets and airdomes behind the lines in Flanders. -
e Sure and
ours
(Attractively Boxed) at any
uigley Dru
tores
Notes of
Vola Vale is another example ot a ! youne woman who ' has realized her childhood ambitions. She has done more than realize her dearest wish, however, for she has become a star of the first rank and Is noted as one of the most beautiful women on the screen. . Miss Vale was bora -In New York and was educated at Chevy Chase. Washington, D. C. Her first .step towards the realization of her dreams was as an extra in pictures with Biograph. From there on her rise was rapid, as she did much good work for the Biograph and Lasky studios. Since joining Balboa she has appeared in the following four-reel features: "The Secret of Black Mountain, "The Lady in the Library" and "ZollenBtein." Other notable pictures in which she has appeared have been "Each to His Kind" with Se6sue Hayakawa, and with George Beban In "His Sweetheart" and "Amen Cornet. MOTHER CARES FOR HER MONEY Norma Talmadge, who has been one of the highest . paid motion picture stars, with a weekly salary of four figures for some time, and who now owns her own company and studio, has never had a bank account and never signs a check! No, she doesn't keep her money behind the clock or hidden under a loose brick in the fireplace, either. The fact of the case is Mis Talmadge simply turns over everything to mother just as she used to m the dayB when she was making $18 a week. She con fessed -it the other day when she was asked to buy some boxes for a benefit. "I'll be glad to take them if you'll trust me," she said. "I haven't enough money with me." "A check is as good as money," it was suggested. Miss Talmadge shook her head with a smile. "I never had a check book in all my life," she said, "and I've never had a bank account. But wait a moment -" She went to the phone and asked mother to write out one for her, and it transpired that mother had retained the habit of the $18-a-week days, too that of refusing daughter nothing. Which is more than a bank account For Catarrhal Deafness and Head Noises Here in America there Is much suffering from catarrh and head noises. American people would do well to consider the method employed by the English to combat this insidous disease. Everyone knows how damp the English climate is and how dampness affects those suffering from catarrh. In England they treat catarrhal deafness and head noises as a constitutional disease and use an internal remedy for it that is really very efficacious. Sufferers who could scarcely hear a watch tick tell how they had their hearing restored by this English treatment to such an extent that the tick of a watch was plainly audible seven and eight inches away from either ear. Therefore if you know someone who Is troubled with catarrh, catarrhal deafness or head noises, cut out this formula and hand it to them and you will have been the means of saving some poor sufferer perhaps from total deafness. The prescription can be easily prepared at home for about 75c and is made as follows: From your druggist obtain 1 oz. of Parmint (Double Strength), about 75c worth. Take this home, and add to it Vi pint of hot water and 4 ounces of granulated sugar; stir until dissolved. Take a tablespoonful four times a day. Parmint is used in this way not only to reduce by tonic action the inflamation and swelling in the Eustachain Tubes, and thus to equalize the air pressure on the drum, but to correct any excess of secretions in the middle ear, and the results it gives are usually remarkably.quick and effective. Every person who has catarrh In any form should give this recipe a trial and free themselves from this destructive disease. Adv. Get
Movieland
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Vola Vane. will do. They refuse checks lots of times. Arthur Ashley, who recently added acting for the legitimate stage to his acting and directoral capacities for the World Film corporation, has decided to continue with the screen for Beware cf tlie lad for lofnin 4 SOME people that sell you premium coffee are indirectly making false promises. They may have good intentions, but they simply can't give you Suality-coffee and premiums at le price of o!c3n Sun Coffee the chaffless, dustless coffee that is never sold with premiums. Each pound yields an unusual number of cups each rich and fragrant. Sold only by grocers. The Woolson Spice Co. Toledo, Ohio Palladium Want Ads Pay.
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IB
These new and beautiful Cars that insure comfort and pleasure when a winter trip is planned are now ready for your approval and delivery. We offer in the closed car 4 'Buick" series 7-Passenger Four-Door Sedan 6-cylinder, price. . .$2275 6-Cylinder Coupe, priced. . . . . . . ....... .... . $1785 - E 45 Model with Winter Top : . . . . .......... . $1550 If you don't want a closed Buick model, we have for you the open models priced $840 to $1575.
BiiiuilMi Giipii
1107 Main St
another year rather than renounce the pictures for the stage. He will continue with the World. ' It is 6aid that Theda Bara will wear forty-odd costumes in "Du Barry." Marin Sals has been Eigned for Fox productions.
In Cairo men employed in the native tailoring shops iron clothes with their feet. A solid block of wood rests on the top of the iron and on this the man places one foot, guiding the Iron by means of a long handle.
W
aMs-fltocr
military
mm
The thing! Dark Russia Calf, Black Siberian Calf, Gunmetal,
with cloth top, Cordo Calf Khaki cloth tops. Prices
$5 to WZM
SPATS In all the new shades; height 10 inches. Priced $2.00.
WaDIk-OweiP
Boot Shop
708 Main St.
Richmond
r u i KROGER'S sia 55-1 SOUR PICKLES 10c L TJ Country Club Pure Lard, no. .r-'-JL M-Jr Government inspected, lb .....AOt FLAKE WHITE t?'Z....2C P TP . TVT S or Black, 9 M MLLsJ-.Li ig good cookers, 2 lbs. AOK Sfm Clifton Naptha, A good Soap for 9Qf "tL XL washing or scrubbing, 5 bars "OL Butter Crackers aa.;..;.llc Fancy Head Rice 3f0pr???.d: 29c New Sauer Kraut .............Sc PFTilF 7 A An elegant Butter substitute, cl'Off jL SLt JL " JLi Hi Vr or capsule with each pound OUL CORN MEAL Fresh pure white, lb .6c MACARONI OR SPAGHETTI Long cut, 2 lbs .25c OLD DUTCH CLEANER, 2 cans ,15c Send the children, they will get the same quality and attention you would if you called yourself. THE KROGER STORE i 12 N. Sixth. D. F. POTTENGER, Distributor. Richmond, Ind. I
VALVE-I NHE'AO j fe) MOTOR CARS
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PLENTY OF HOMEGROWN POTATOES Apples, Cabbage. Ooiouj, Sweet Potatoes and so on. BREESE & WINTERS " Fruit House 27 N. 6th St. Phone 1850. with AUTALK DOVER "Mel!"
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A m mJ I
Phone 1925
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