Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 42, Number 309, 8 November 1917 — Page 5
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, THURSDAY, NOV. 8, 1917.
PAGE FIVJ
Heart and Home Problems
i
I ..-V:':y K tPfA
Dear Mrs. Thompson: I have been going with a girl for five months and have been very nice to her. I took her - to dances and to every party that we had and she thinks a great deal of men. Now she has her sister's
friend visiting her and I have fallen In love with ' her. I don't want to hurt this first girl's feelings, but I do not want to let some other fellow get to going steady with the other girl. Do you think I could tell her how things are so she would understand it? If the girl I
have been going with got sore
about it, what
could I do? VICTORIA.
Ton are -certainly placed in a
peculiar position, and I don't see just how you can drop the girl you have been going with and still have her for your friend. Don't you think that this liking for the new girl, her visitor,
is Just a passing fancy and that in a little while you would get tired of her and be glad to have your girl back again? If some other boy does get acquainted with her. it shouldn't make any difference. Pethaps later both you and the other boy will want to change about some. Don't think so much about what to do if the other girl doesn't like your actions. Think rather what to do so that she will like you. Try to please here, and in pleasing her you will please yourself too. Dear Mrs. Thompson: I have been going with a young man in this town ever since last winter. Some say that I should not go with him for he is coptinually making dates and then not tilling them. ' I know I love him for I have tested myself and am satisfied that I cannot get along without him. x Some 'time ago I a6ked him to attend a rum party with me and he said no, that his sister was Just home from her northern home and that she would leave this week for the south
for the winter and that he would have
to go home and 6pend the evening with her. but he said he would come
up the next night
The next night came and he did not appear. I am awfully hurt about it and to do myself justice I should quit him, but I can't do it. I have always babied him and always when he did this before I have reproved him for it but have overlooked it and just kept on. ' He acts as if he loves me, but at times gets stubborn and does this way. Do you think he intends to hurt me and does hot lqe me, or is it because he does not understand the feelings of our sex and does not know that his actions hurt me? I should like very much to have your opinion of him. "BETTY JIM."
There are some men who do not seem to care how much they hurt a girl's feelings, and apparently this
young man you love is of that type.
They do not really mean any harm, but just haven't got it In their hearts to be considerate. I have no doubt but that this young man thinks he is doing all right to make dates thft way and then break them, but even
though It is thoughtless on his part,
It he does it now, probably you can
expect him always to be the same way.
careless of his appointments, thoughtless and even cold hearted. Of course, you can forgive his want
ing to be home for the short time his
sister was there, but unless he has
some good explanation or excuse for hot keeping his appointment the next evening, he needs to be taught a
lesson. The fact that you love him 6hould not stand in the way of your quitting him. Tell him definitely and seriously that if he ever breaks another date with you, you will not make another. If he cares for you, he will heed your warning. If he does, it will make him much more desirable in the future. Dear Mrs. Thompson: I am eighteen years old and have been going steady with a young man nineteen. I want to know how late it Is proper for me to let him stay at night. DOLLY. Ten or ten-thirty is as late as you ought to allow him to stay.
H miseKold Hint . .
MENU HINT iple) lake live iai,c s:
wash and core. Put them Into granite
UNIVERSITY ROMANCE TO END FN OXFORD WEDDING
Breakfast. Rolled Oats with Figs. -Buttered Toast ' Coffee, , Luncheon. ,
Scalloped Potatoes. Radishes.
Onions. Corn Bread. "Tea.;'.' Dinner. Lamb Stew. , Boiled -Rice.
New Corn. : Bread- 'Butter.
Baked Custard. '
LITTkE THINGS YOU SHOULD KNOW. Orange juice is a preventive of scurvy among children who use pas
teurized milk. .
Tomatoes filled with- minced pineapple, celery and chopped nuts .mixed with mayonnaise are delicious. Pack glass and china in hay that is slightly damp. This will prevent the
Apples, cored and filled with chop-' if taA Aatae. rr fip-c titan haV& miVa i !l
6tew pan with one cup brown sugar.
one-half teaspoon, cinnamon extract
and pinch of salt Cover them with boiling water and cook until soft Serve cold. Very nice with chocolate frosting over top of each apple. Graham Pudding One cup .sifted Graham flour; one-half cup melted tetter ; one-half cup - molasses, one-
half cup sweet milk, one-half cup raisins, one .teaspoon soda,-one egg, cinnamon and nutmeg . Put in greased pan, steam two and one-half hours. Serve with lemon sauce. Sauce One teaspoonful butter, two tab lespoonfuls. flour, three tblespoonfuls sugar; mix with a little cold water, until smooth, then add hot water
and boil. Add one tablespoon lemon
juice or vinegar and a little nutmeg.
OXFORD, O.. Nov. 8. A pretty college , romance will , this evening cuV minate ' In" marriage. : Miss Eva Demand, pretty and accomplished daugh
ter of Board : of Public Affairs Clerk
H. A. and Mrs. Demand, and Elmer W.
Hinkle, manager of the Oxford Can
ning Co., will be married at 6:30
o'clock in the presence of a few
friends and relatives. The young couple became engaged several years ago while both : were students in Mir ami university.
The most primitive mammals, the monotremes, are confined to Australia. There is the platypus, a strange beast which lays eggs like a turtle, has horny pads for teeth and a bill like the duck; its front feet are webbed and both back and front feet have claws.
JENNIE SMITH, EVANGELIST, RECOMMENDS BLISS NATIVE HERB TABLETS FOR CONSTIPATION
Relief from Eczema
an excellent brbeakfast dish
Parsley and sweet herbs should be J Dont worry about eczema or other gathered on a sunshiny day when full ' skin - troubles. You can have a clear.
grown lr tney are to be dried. ' healthv skin bv using a little zemo,!
If white potatoes are inclined to-i obtained at any drug store for 35c, or bark herbs wh ch are com tnm viov w).n hcino mi o : ti v . roois, oar ana neros, wnicn are com
The world's greatest evangelist among railroad men is Jennie Smith. For over fifty years she has labored among them, preaching . the light of truth. Although seventy-five years old, she is still actively engaged in this good work. She attributes her good health to the regular use of Bliss
J Native Herb Tablets, which she rec
ommends to every railroad man who suffers from constipation, kidney or liver trouble. Eternal vigilance is not only the price of liberty but it Is also necessary to good health. Nature
gives us the means in the form of
Revelations of a Wife BY ADELE GARRISON
A Momentous Talk on Finance and What It Led To (Concluded). Dicky voiced my thought. "You'll have a sweet time keeping a budget with that Polish friend in the kitchen. Katie and a budget would be a scream. Vot you mean. Missis Graham? Me no know dot Me feex nice dinner, no bodder dot budg-it." His imitation of Katie's probable bewilderment was so life-like that I lay back in my chair convulsed with laughter. But I did not lose sight of the fact that I must finish this discussion with Dicky while he was in the mood for it. So I came back again to my original proposition. This time I tried coaxing. "Dicky boy, please listen. I am awfully in earnest about this, and' I dont want to bother you again about it. But wont you tell me what your income is, and then I can have something to work upon." "Madge, your talents are wasted
certainly do not spend the whole $1,000 In the month you receive it." - "Oh of course, I have a checking account," interrupted Dicky. "I bank my checks as fast as I get them." "Well," I went on triumphantly, "then you must know what your yearly income is. If I knew that I can estimate the year's budget and thus far hand out about what the expense of each week or month ought to be." "My yearly income, madam," Dicky sprang to his feet and strutted across the room pompously, "Is known only
to the Income tax man. By the time!
I had it figured out for him I was attacked with amnesia, and I haven't remembered anything pertaining to money since." - "Do be serious, Dick. Don't tease me so." Dicky came back to his seat evidently subdued. "I don't mean to tease you, sweetheart" he said, "but it's such a bore to me to bother about
few drops of vinegar to the water they
are boiled in. Choose the summer meals with a deliberate view to economizing in fuel and thus avoiding the overheating of the house. THE TABLE Codfish Loaf (meat substitute) Take amount of codfish generally needed for a meal; shred or chop finely. Boil and mash potatoes and mix with the codfish. Heap upon a platter. Pour over it milk gravy and garnish with hard boiled egg. Napoleon Noodles One pound of ground fresh pork; brown In frying pan, add three quarts of water, let simmer thirty minutes, add salt, pepper, also onion if desired, and a 10cent box of noodles (or home-made ones). Cook twelve minutes. This will serve eight hungry people. Irish Stew: (for family of five Can be made from left-overs from Sunday dinner and it is cheap. One large cut brown gravy, one large cup sliced boiled potatoes, one large cup boiling
water, one teaspoon onion salt, one teaspoon celery salt one-half teaspoon salt, one pinch of black pepper. Good served hot on toast. Scalloped Onions Remove skins of
onions, cut In slices, put Into saucepan of boiling water and cook until tender. Put into buttered baking dish, cover with white sauce and sprinkle with buttered bread crumbs. Place in oven to brown. White Sauce Put two tablespoons butter in saucepan, stir until thoroughly mixed. Pour on gradually one cup milk, adding about one-third at a time; stir until smooth. Add half teaspoon salt and speck of pepper. Baked Rice With Tomatoes Boil one cup rice, mix with can of tomatoes. Add a little onion Juice, piece of butter size of walnut, salt and dash of black pepper. Put in buttered dish. Cover with bread crumbs and brown. Boiled Swwet Apples: (for five peo-
Zemo eenerallv removes pimples, black
heads,, blotches, eczema, and ringworm and makes the 6kin dear and healthy. Zemo is a clean, penetrating, antiseptic liquid, neither sticky nor greasy and stains nothing. It is easily applied and costs a mere trifle for each . application. It is always dependable. The E. W. Rose Co.. Cleveland, O.
pounded in scientific proportion m Bliss Native Herb Tablbets. For over
thirty years, these tablets have been helping mankind throughout the civilized world to enjoy freedom from the evil effects of constipation, whether acute or chronic, disordered liver and kidney trouble. Don't allow yourself to suffer another day, but go to your druggist and obtain a box of Bliss Native Herb Tablets. Each box contains 200 tablets. Take one every night and you will never regTet it. The price is $1.00. Be sure to get the genuine, put up in yelloy boxes bearing the
portrait of Alonzo O . Bliss. Each tablet shows our trade mark. Sold by Clem Thistlethwaite and local agents everywhere. Adv.
Cough Nearly Cone in 24 Hours
w wn. jm, -kA
Th tha oral WTMrtese wttb tills tome-made remedy. Cost
Anyone who tries thia pleasant task lug home-made cough syrup, will quickly understand why it is used in more homes in the United States and Canada than any other couch, remedv. The way it takes hold of an obstinate cough, ffivtnjr immediate relief, will make you regret that you never tried it be lore. It is a truly dependable cough remedy that should be kept handy in every home, to nse at the first sign of a cough during the night or day tune, Any drceist can supply. you with 2 ounces of Pinex (60 cents worth). Pour this into a pint bottle and fill tha bottle with plain granulated susai syrup. The total cost is about 65 ceatS and vou have a full pint of the most effective remedy you ever used. The quick, laetins' relief you pet froa this excellent cough, eyrun will really surprise you. It promptly heals tha inflamed membranes that line the throat and air passages, stops the annoying throat tickle, loosens the phlegm, and soon your couch stops entirely. Splendid for bronchitis, croup, whooping cougb and bronchial asthma. Pinex ia a highly concentrated eom pound of Norway pine extract, and ii famous the world over for its healing effect on the membranes. To avoid disappointment ask for "2 ounces of Pinx" with full directions and don't accent anything else. A guarantee of absolute satisfaction or money promptly refunded jroes with this prcpratioa. The Pinex Co., Ft Wayne,
Palladium Want Ads Pay.
I'll
-the Stove with a a "Little Furnace" In it
around here. As a collector for an in-1 money. Earning it and spending it
stalment house or an Investigator of! those are the only things I know about
the income tax u ought to be worth
your weight in gold. But you can't drag any secrets from me for there are none to drag. Sometimes my income Is zero for a week or two "
it. Four years ago my yearly income
was so small I'd hate to name the figures; just enough to scrape along on. Then things took a turn and they
have been getting better ever since
Acids in Stomach Cause Indigestion CREATE GAS, SOURNESS AND PAIN HOW TO TREAT
Here it is at last a warm air heating plant which every one can afford. A heating plant which works as thoroughly and satisfactorily as the ordinary small warm air furnace, yet costs little more than any ordinary heating stove to buy, no more to install, and much less to operate.
is two heating systems in one not a stove, not a furnace, but a combination of both. It sets in the room like a stove, its exterior looks like a stove, but here the similarity ends. For its interior is utterly different from any stove you have ever seen inside it is built like a warm air furnace.
I
He paused dramtieally, and looked ' Last year I penned down about $6,000, at me closely, evidently expecting; that j I suppose, and this year looks as good
I would show signs of dismay. But I
knew him well enough to v. ait salmly for the rest of his wprds. "And sometimes I have bad checks amounting to a thousand good iron men between the 1st and 31st." It was my turn to -look bewildered. "A thousand Iron men?" I inquired doubtfully. ' I beg a thousand pardons. I will explain. One iron man is cue dollar. One thousand times one dollar or one thousand dollars. Do I go to the head of the class?" "You do," I repHed. "It I understand you correctly, sometimes your income is $1,000 a month, : sometimes nothing at all." '"Oh, wise young wife; oh, excellent ;-oucg woman." parodied Dicky. "You are correct in your understanding. Now do you see wty I can't tell you how much my weekly income is?" ' I don't see at all," I persisted. "You
or better."
"Why, Dicky," I gasped. "I never dreamed you were so prosperous. You must have a lot of money saved up or invested," "Saved? Invested!" Dicky gave a short laugh. "Shows you don't know much about yours truly. I always keep enough ahead at the tank so I won't run short. I guess my balance is about a thousand, but I haven't a penny anywhere else."
j ly nine-tenths of the cases of stomach i
trouble, indigestion, sourness, burn- j t&m
ing, gas, bloating, nausea, etc., are due to an excess of hydrochloric acid in the stomach and not as some believe to a lack of digestive juices. The delicate stomach lining is irritated, digestion is delayed and food' sours, causing the disagreeable symptoms which every stomach sufferer knows so well.
Artificial digestents are not needed
in such cases and may do real harm, j
Try laying aside all digestive aids and : 'k instead get from any druggist a ffcwijj ounces of Bisurated Magnesia and ! w
take a teaspoonful m a quarter glass; of water right after eating. This
5m
m
ua. uicsy. i suppose my xace sweetens the stomach, prevents the; was eloquent with my opinion of such , formation of excess acid and there Is
prodigality, for Dicky looked at me
curiously for a moment, and then
jumped to his feet,
and down the room,
his face grave. He was evidently pondering some course of action. With the memory of his outburst the night before me I trembled as I saw his preoccupied face. Had I said too much? Was he angry?
j no sourness, gas or pain. Bisuratod 1
HOT AR JNTO ROOM HR
. tR ArrMSLY
ment, ana men: Magnesia (in powder or tablet form j 2;f began to pace up j never liquld or milk-) is harmless to g i, his head bent, , stomach, inexpensive to take and ! Wl
for stomach purposes. It is used by ' jfej thousands of people who enjoy their meals with no more fear of indiges- l tion. Adv. i 1
lOMEO Womeji
aaaggaaamaaiaipB
Are Told Relief
Flow to Find from Pain.
Nashua, 1T.H. aI am nineteen years old and every month for two years I had such pains that I would often faint and have to leave school. I had such pain I did not know what to do with myself and tried so many remedies that were of no use. I read about Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetahlo Compound in the newsp- pers and decided to
try it, and that is how I found rehef from
pain and feel so much better than 1 used. to. Whan I hear of any girl suffering
as I did I tell them how lydia E. Pihkham's Vegetable Compound helped me." Dzixsta mIktdt, 20 Bowers Street, Nashua, N. IL
lydia E. Rniham's 'Vegetable Compound, made from native roots and herbs, contains no narcotic or harmful drug3, and is, therefore,
- THE PERFECTLY SAFE REMEDY
KTBIA E. PMKHM4 S
LYDIA E.PINKHAM MEDICINE CO. LYNN. MASS.
PL .Sfe. jgL- - 3S&ftS HOT AIR PIPE tu '-te MAY ATTACHES mmuc: Tvi-jl here to heat 1 fJiE'r " --T1 . upper floor
HEAT HEAT DEfLECn
jgjl jj 50 hours' fire on one charge of . Tgy any kind of fueL lltV '
ENTERS
tFLECTED
FLOOR
Easy Terms
Join the Delighted Buyers Who Have Solved Their Heating Problems with this rB&fbni&S' Hot Storm
Don't make a mistake by buying an unsatisfactory heater.
ill
111H;
It cos(s you nothing to investigate. We're glad to explain. . ' ; .
MAIN STREET. CORNER NINTH
''Mfirtr-iiiit'HllMI
