Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 43, Number 111, 21 March 1918 — Page 5
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. THURSDAY, MARCH 21, 1918
PAGE JUVB
Heart
ipro'
OH
Home
ELIZABETH THOMPSON
n 5?
Dear Mrs. Thompson: I would like your counsel regarding a matter I am contemplating doing. Do you think it wrong to go to another city with a gentleman acquaintance and remain
over night if you spend the night with relatives and he stays at a hotel? I thought there might be some ' talk about such action and before doing so would like to have your views on the matter. D. If you are positlve the young man with whom you are going is of good character I can see no barm in your going to another city with him. As long as your conscience is
clar you need not worry. However if you are afraid of what might be said, stay at home. Dear Mrs. Thompson: (1) I am eighteen years old and married. My husband is in the army at Camp Hattiesburg. Miss. He wants me to come to him as he is stationed permanently. My mother doesn't want me to go as she hates to give me up. I am the only daughter and she will be left alone. I am between two fires. Please advise me what to do. (2) What colors do you advise for a baby boy. Pink or blue? DOUBTFUL. (1) Your place is at your husband's side. You married him for better or worse. Since you are married he comes first. He may be called to France and then you would regret your staying away from him. (2) Pink is always used for a boy baby and blue for a girl. , Dear Mrs. Thompson: Please answer ' the following questions: (1) Is eighteen considered too young ' to keep steady company with a young man you have known for quite a long time. ' j (2) On what fingers should the en'gagement and wedding rings be worn
if both are desired to be worn at the same time? . (3) What materials and colors are most popular for spring? (4) Is it considered incorrect to attend the show on Sunday night when there is a 6how you especially wish to see however not making a habit of it? INQUISITIVE EIGHTEEN. (1) I certainly do think eighteen 13 too young for a girl to keep steady company. It is all right to go with i friend now and then but do not tie yourself down to one boy. You are entirely too young. (2) The engagement and wedding rings are worn on the third finger of the left hand. The wedding ring is slipped on first. (2) All the colors this year are very bright Popular colors are old rose, fusia, Alice blue and Scotch plaids. (3) It is all right to go to a theatre once in a while on Sunday providing you do not neglect Sunday school and church services. Dear Mrs. Thompson: We will be greatly pleased if you will answer these questions for us: (1) Do you think a girl of fifteen going to High school is too young' to have a steady. (2) Should a girl accept a photograph of an old friend in the navy to whom she is not engaged? (3) Do you think a girl of 17 is too young to get married if her parents do not object. (4) What would you advise a girl to do if a boy friend with whom she has been corresponding and who haa always written only friendly letters should suddenly begin to call her very endearing names in his letters. Cinderella and Sleeping Beauty. (1) You are certainly too young to have a "steady," (2) I do not see why you cannot accept the photograph of the young man. Most every girl now-a-days has a picture of a sailor or soldier boy. (3) Yes a girl of seventeen is too young to get married. I do not see how a parent could consent to such an early marriage. (4) The young man must care for you. The best thing for you to do is simply ignore his terms of endearment. Just write him friendly letters. If he keeps on writing such letters just tell him you do not care for him In that way.
ouetiold
JL JL sWA usviar MRJ1. MORTON
The Liberty War Kitchen .rings conservation into tho homes by demonstration to the housewives the best methods' of wartime cooking. In doing this the foods most needed abroad are being taken up in turn, the best substitutes are discussed, recipes for preparing them are exchanged, and an actual demonstration is given. Below are given two recipes of wartime bread as made in this Liberty War Kitchen with the itemized cost for each Ingredient. Cornmeal and Wheat Bread (1 Loaf) Takes about 5',i hours. l'J cup water 1 yeast cake $0.02 12 teaspoonful salt tablespoon corn syrup 006 2 '4 cups wheat flour 06 V2 cup cornmeal 045
Weight, 20 ounces
$0,131
Heat the rest to boiling point and add the sirup and salt. Sprinkle in the cornmeal and stir with a fork until thick. Put over a
double boiler and cook 20 minutes. Cool, add the yeast in the luke-warm water, add the flour gradually and milk, Let rise until three times in size. Shape and put into pans and let rise until three times in size again. Bake in moderate even 45 minutes. Oatmeal Bread (1 Loaf) Takes from five to six hours, cup of boiling water z cup of oat flakes $0,006 V2 cake yeast 01 cup of luke-warm water About 3 cups flour 06
Cost of loaf approximately. . .$0,076 Pour the boiling water over the oat flakes in a bowl. Add sirup and salt and allow to stand until luke-warm. then add the yeast in luke-warm water. Add enough bread flour to knead and knead 15 minutes. Let it rise until three times in size in a warm (not hot) place. Knead about five minutes and put on a greased pan allowing it to become three times in size again. Bake in a moderate oven 45 to 50 minutes.
Revelations of a Wife BY ADELE GARRISON
; WHY, GO AHEAD! "Well, you're a plucky little devil. I will say that for you." Harry Underwood's mocking 'oice drew me back from the two at the piano. "You are going on the theory, however, that Dicky isn't jealous, that he believes comfortably, as I do. that what's sauce for the goose is sauce for the gander, and vice versa." He nodded his hear! meaningly toward Lillian and Dicky at the piano. "Don't you think it! Old Dicky is a regular cave man. He doesn't mind philandering a bit himself i a nprfprtlv Diatonic way. of
S course, but he'd eat up alive a pretty
little wire tnai iei ner giantes resi iuu often on good looking cousins." He leaned more closely toward me. I shrank backward, and with a quick movement stepped behind one of the high-barked chairs and stood looking at him over the top of it. He laughed musodly. "Determined not to like me, aren't vou." he said. "Say, If I were a regular villain, I'd call out to Dicky. 'Did vou know your wife lost her wedding .'and engagement rings this morning
when she was dining with cousin? Good joke, eh?" My heart sank but I spoke steadily. "If your very peculiar idea of humor prompts you to utter such an untruth when you see the rings" and I held up my left hand toward him "why. go ahead!" How the Scene Ended When I held out my left hand to Harry Underwood in order to show
t f
him that my rings were not lost, as! he was half-playfully insisting. I did! j. . ii Ji.l 1 Innl sviillr-'
noi count upon me ouuuuwu ness and audacity of the man. He caught the hand, holding it so tightly that I could not draw It away. "You're a game little cuss. Why can't you be friends with me? You know I won't tell Dicky about your loss of the rings. Oh, I understand you found them again, but you and cousin were pretty groggy with fright about them when I saw you; don't forget that. But I'll never tell, never, never, cross my heart, hope to die." I knew it was the veriest nonsense The man was too much a buffoon to
be dangerous, but his assumption of j sharing a secret of mine, of protecting me. was intolerable. How I wished;
for the safety of my own home. It seemed to me that I could never endure the rest of the day and evening with its program of going out to some restaurant. My head was aching hard by this time. I was afraid if I stayed through the day I would be really ill with it. What chance had I of getting away: Dicky would not understand and would resent .my wish to go. Harry Underwood was hopeless. There was but one person who coud manage my going home if she so wished Mrs. Underwood. There is something puzzling to be about my feeling for Mrs. Underwood. I dislike most of her ways. I resent Dicky's friendship for her. but there is such an air of efficiency and good will about her that I know of no one whom I would rather ask for help in an emergency. Lil to the Rescue I raised my eyes and looked at her. As if she had understood my unspoken appeal, she nodded ever so slightly, and went on playing She was near the end of the selection, and in a moment a little lilting run, a crashing high chord, a haunting low note, and she rose from the bench, with Dicky protesting violently. "That's always the way with you, Lil. Just play one thing, get everybody in a musical mood, and then quit."
THOUGHTS TO THINK ABOUT Give to get. Only conscience dictates duty. Delay would do less harm if everybody would delay; action would do more good if everybody would act. The real citizens of Richmond are the property owners; if you are paying rent, you should read the real estate classifications in The Palladium today and see if your own new home isn't advertised there.
boys away, and you stay with me this afternoon. I'm a splendid nurse, really." ' Tractors Busy Plowing Lots for Home Gardens The Junior high school war gardens were ploughed by the Weldex tractor,
Thursday under the direction of Gard- j ener Murphy. This tractor will be I
used to plow the gardens in West
nicnmona. me iniernauonai xiarvater tractor is working on South Fifteenth street this week.
Murphy Explains How to Conserve Gardens
"Perhaps I only know one tune," Lillian returned, laughing as she swiftly crossed the room to me. "You boys go and smoke," she commanded. "I'm going to show Mrs. Graham some of the most woiderful bargains in gloves and stockings I picked up the other day. We'll see you later." She took my arm and ushered me swiftly across the room to her bedroom, and shut the door behind us. "Here, sit down, lean back and smell this before you say anything." she said. "Ycur head must be aching terribly. I can tell by your eyes. I have 'em myself." She put a vial of some strong aromatic stuff to my nose, and stroked my forehead with the disengaged hand. The strong magnetic stroke soothed me unaccountably. "Look here," she said suddenly. "You've been terribly upset this morning. I can see that. I don't want to know anything about it. 1 can guess enough from what Dicky said the other day, when he spoke of your cousin's return from South America. But you're not up to going out any more today. You ought to be in bed this minute. Suppose we send the
JACKSON TOWNSHIP LEAGUE ARRANGES FOR MEETING
CAMBRIDGE CITY, Ind.. March 21. The officers of the Jackson Township Franchise League held a meeting at the home of Mrs. Viola K. Roth to arrange for the County convention to be held in Richmond. March 30, and for the Sixth District convention to
be held in Cambridge City sometime! in April. Mrs. Olive Beldon Lewis, of j Richmond, Director of the War Ser-
vice Department of the Woman's Fran-
chise League, was present.
Gardener Murphy gave tho first of a series of lectures on gardening, illustrated with stereopticon views, at the high school auditorium, Wednesday evening. His subject was "Transplanting." The method of conserving every particle of space in the backyards of Richmond residents was 6hown. Germination of seed, with views on how to make a garden eligible for a prize
'II 1 l.iW 0 "vrr
icht All dnie.
i4
contest, made the lecture interesting. "Culture and Care of Garden Plants for Transplanting" Is the subject for the second lecture. Mondav evening,
Hasr Under Arms iMHliracfe
For rem !. ttlr Im
mrmmrn tker la actktaa; mm nib try aa DaMlraela, ta rtrlaal I la. aid. It la reaar far laataat aaa
vealeat ta mrnmtr. D eaaaUr aflleaetoaa tar
air fraaa
Oalr vcaaiaa DeMtrmela anrr-kack naraatca la
aekas. At all tallet caaatcra la SOe, .$1 aad 9X ataea. or ar small fraaa - ta alalia wrapper aa rerelat at price. FREE Ck aane ! alala aaalcd eavelapa aa r ea.ua t. OcMlrael. Park Ava. aaa Uta at w Yark.
Buy Thrift Stamps and War Stamps. Subscribe for the next Liberty Lean bond issue offered within a few weeks.
Beautiful! Mail" Tinting
DAUGHTER FOUND REMEDY THAT SAVED HER MOTHER
hum
The Well - known Cod Liver and Iron Tonic, Without Oil To MakeThem Strong Weakness is the one great drawback to health after sickness. It often seems a3 though strength never would return. In such cases Vinol i3 a real blessing. You eee it contains the very elements needed to restore good digestion and a healthy appetite, which is quickly followed by rich blcod and perfect assimilation cf nourishing food, and in a few days one can just feel one's self "building up," and soon as strong as ever. There is nothing like Vinci to create strength for all run-down, nervous conditions, weak, women, overworked men, feeble eld peepb and delicate children. WE WILL RETURN YOUR MONEY if Vinol fails to benefit you. Clem Thistlethwaite, Druggist, Richmond and other drug stores
Nothing no robs a woman of faer good looks and attractiveness as Cray, streaked or fiided
Ana tbere is no more reason or sense in tolerating
unattr.c t'T balr tban there is in
coming cowos.
The one bair tain tbcC stands supre Is "Crownstone." It is simple and easy to use. No mi; in?. Just comb or brush it Into your bair. It can not be detected, will not mb or wash off. acts
Instantly, and la absolutely harmless. "Browoatone" ill etve any shade desired from light golden brown to black. Your druggist sells 'Brownatone" or wilt get it for you. A sample and a booklet will be mailed you upon receipt of 10 cents, and your orders will be filled direct from our lanOrstories If yon prefer. Mention sbsde desired. Tuo sizes J5c and SI .IS. Insist on 'Browuatone" at your hairtfressers Kenton Pharmacal Co.. 460 CopplnBldg., Coving-ton, Ky. Sold and guaranteed at all leading drug and toilet counters.
MssT
Suffered Terriby But Did Not Want to Submit to an Operation. Mrs. Mary K. Peroutka, R. F. D. No. 1. Box 41. Mllladore. Wis., is a firm believer in FrultoLa and Traxo. She writee: "I wish. I could tell everybody how much Fruitola and Traxo has done for our family. Both my husband and I were cured of gall stones, and in such a short time and at such little cost, and Fruitola. is so easy to take. Four years I suffered those terrible spells and at last the doctor said I had gall stones and advised an operation. I said If the doctors were in the house when I had one of those spells I might let them operate, but cot otherwise. My daughter wrote to a lady who had been cured of gall stones without an operation and who recommended Fruitola. I took only one bottle of Fruitola and
have not been bothered since. My husband had stomach trouble and he used Fruitola too, with most satisfactory results. Fruitola and Traxo are compounded from the original Edsall formulas at the Pinus laboratories in Monticello, Ills., and can be purchased in drug stores; a doctor's prescription is not necessary. Fruitola is a pure fruit oil that acts as an intestinal lubricant and disintegrates the hardened particles that cause so much suffering, discharging the accumulated waste to the sufferer's intense relief. One dose is usually sufficient to indicate its efficacy. Traxo is a tonic-alterative that is most effective to rebuild and restore the weakerfed. run-down system. A booklet of special interest to those who suffer from stomach trouble can be obtained by writing to the Pinus Laboratories, Monticello, Ills.
. , 2sr . ; 's-'-x
MRS. MARY K. PEROUTKA
T Train Your Hair As An i Actress Docs
t
No class of people devotes as much . time to beauty as do actresses, and no class must be more careful to retain and develop their charms. Inquiry develops the information that in hair care they find it dangerous to shampoo with any makeshift hair cleanser. The. majority say that to have the best hair wash and scalp stimulator at a cost of about three cents, one need only get a package of canthrox from .your druggist; dissolve a teaspoonful in a cup of hot watr and your shani-r-oo is ready. This makes enough shampoo liquid to apply it to all the hair instead of just the top of the .head. After its use the hair dries irapidly, with unjform color. Dandruff, excess oil and dirt are quickly dis- ' solved and entirely disappear when j you rinse the hair. After this your ' hair will be so flvffy that it will look much heavier than it is. Its lustre and softness will also delight you, while the stimulated scalp gains the ; hialth which insures hair growth.
Beautiful Hair The secret is in the regular use of a perfect shampoo. HeancTs Fluff, made of pure vegetable oils, is a perfect shampoo. It nourishes the hair and prevents dandruff. Buy a cake of Heand's Fluff today. You will find that it has a freshening effect upon the hair, and keeps it soft and fclossy.
the tTn
THE
PERFECT SHAMPOO
All Dru&ists 25 Cents
5 & 10c WallPaper
We are now showing the most varied assortment of the cheaper grades of Wall Paper that we have ever handled and contrary to what might be thought, the values are better than ever. Don't Buy Until You Have Seen Our Stock Dickinson Wall Paper Co. 504 Main Street Phone 2201
FOR GOOD HEALTH SKATE AT COLISEUM TUESDAYTHURSDAY and SATURDAY
FURNITURE worthy of a place In any home at prices which make it possible for every horns to own it.
Tuncc DfifiUC C... af
.i. .wv,m--aui- KVUlV $30.00
OP
nished as Low as. .
.JS
U.&D
a j
CASH
Week
FOUR R00MS-Com- $ pktely Furnished ....
Terms $45.00 CASH
$3)50
Per Week
" - " I ! N al
Three-FIeee Outfit
THE BED Vernis Marth Finish, Continuous Posts Substantial and Sanitary Construction.
THE SPRING Heavy Link Wire Fabric Stretched Over an all-steel frame.
THE MATTRESS Full 45-lb. weight thick cotton top, covered with an excellent ticking.
THE VALUE Cannot be Equaled. You make no mistake. Buy Now.
RESERVE THE DATE-MARCH 19TH OUR SEMI-ANNUAL STYLE SHOW
Join
m . m ar i
9' . t the
31:
