Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 44, Number 87, 20 February 1919 — Page 5

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM THURSDAY, FEB. 20, 1919.

PAGE FIVE

WITH THE WOMEN OF TODAY ngrn

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There is one branch of business which should be a big field for women workers and it seems to be proving

such, at least in some sections of the, country. Women have made good in

many Instances In the field of bond salesmanship and the increasing number of women investors has brought this business to the front. It is to be wondered that more women have not taken up that work for who. better than woman, could reach the freat mass of working girls and women who would save money and invest their savings if there were only some one to tell them how or to bring the matter of bonds to their attention. The work of the women in the last Liberty loan campaign was a notable achievement and it helped to show what women can do In that line. Mrs. Jacob Kits of Brooklyn, N. Y., believes that there is a great future for women In the bond business, Mrs. Riis who nas been engaged In the bond selling business for some years, is now manager of a large branch office of a New York concern. Her position is unique because she heads an office run entirely by women. Such an establishment is quite an innovation. The office has ben fitted up very attractively and while Its staff is entirely feminine, men as well as . women, will be served.

MRS, JACOB RIIS.

HI

HEART AND BEAUTY PROBLEMS -By Mrs. Elizabeth Thompson

Dear Mrs. Thompson: I am twentyfive years of age and have been going with a man two years my senior for several years. We are engaged, but as yet I have no ring. I know that he loves me, but I am so ashamed in front of my girl friends when they wonder why I have no ring. It is not the value of the ring I want, but what it stands for. Sometimes ' I wish it didn't cost a penny or that he could give mo something else that would have the meaning of a ring. (1) I know he can't go in and buy a ring on a minute's notice, and bis parents are dead, so he couldn't borrow any money. But don't you think If he really cared he would have spared enough by now? He has had several good Jobs. (2) He went to the army and I said nothing about the ring, but now he has been discharged and is going to Washington in two weeks on government work. I feel that I am entitled to the ring. Am I right? He has said that ours is not to be a "rigless" engagement.

(3) I have some money in my own right and a good job. Do you think it would, be right if I bought a ring and told him he should give that for me to wear and show to my friends? Would that make him think less of me?

PAIG&. MAY AGAIN f LEAD STYLE WORLD

With the same originality that gained for Paris the supremacy of the fashion world in pre-war days. Paris is again coming into its own. This chic straw turban is by way of proving it. It is a blue straw artistically trimmed with many dashing wings of a darker blue color.

(4) Would it be all right for me to go to Washington and work there

until we are married in six months,

as he wants me to do it? I will stay

with a married cousin. - BONNIE.

(1) The young man should, not have

proposed to you until he was In a po

sition to buy a ring. He should do his utmost to save In order to get you

a ring soon.

(2) You are right In wanting the ring. But you are wrong in worrying

so much about what people tbink. Tell the man how you feel and ask him when he will be able to give you the ring. v (3) Do not use your money for the

ring. A woman who starts out helping a man in such a way ends by sup

porting him. Let him carry his own burdens. You can help him more

with your faith in him than by giv

ing him the money . he ought to be earning. - (4) It would be proper to live In Washington with your married cousin. But I would advise against it. Re

main at home and give him something

to work for. He will have more time for his work and will progress more

rapidly. When he can take you there as his wife it will be time enough to go. Do not marry if you have to work, too. From your letter it seems to me that the man is too willing to shirk his obligations. Dear Mrs. Thompson : We are two girls sixteen years old and cute looking. We like to go to the movies and dances and have good times. We don't' have- boy friends come to see us like the other girls do. Just once in a great, while we have a date. The boys are always mocking what we say and do. What is the reason? Do you suppose they think we are silly? PALS. The .boys may think you are silly., You seem to admire trifles instead of

important things. To be "cute looking" is not half so great an asset as to be "homely but so very interesting." Do not giggle when you are with boys or make yourselves conspicuous by the way you act and the thongs you say

HOUSEHOLD HINTS By Mrs. Morton

When Baking Pie Crusts, turn pan upside down and bake on the bottom. Prick with fork. When cold they will be straight. To Remove Paint from clothes, sat

urate with lard and turpentine, let lie'

over night, then wash with naptha soap. It will remove paint of long standing. To . Remove Ink when spilled on rugs, cover immediately with 6alt; it will absorb all the Ink without spreading. To Remove Corks from salt and pepper shakeTs, double a string to form a loop, insert in shaker and draw out cord. To keep salt from hardening add a few grains of rice.

To Clean Feathers To clean white !

feathers, dissolve two ounces of white curd soap in two pints of warm water, make Into lather, dip in the feather, and souse up and down until clean. To curl feathers allow them to become almost dry, then shake before a Are till the fronds curl. To Keep Butter Work out all buttermilk and salt it good. Pack each churning in separate jars ; place a cloth over butter; put salt on the cloth, then a lid on the jar. Label each jar. That way you can use the oldest butter first GOOD TO EAT. Pimento Cheese Salad ' Dressing Mix until smooth one tablespoon each of pimento cheese and olive oil. Add one tablespoon vinegar and two tablespoons boiled salad dressing. Frenched Pork Tenderloin Have butcher French the tenderloin. Roll pieces in white of egg (yolk may be used for salad dressing or custard) and very fine bread crumbs. -Saute in butter or butter substitute over slow fire until golden brown. Hamburg with Spaghetti Put one pound of chopped round beefsteak In bottom of pan, over this put two-thirds cup spaghetti, two cups tomatoes on top. Steam for two hours. Then add butter substitute size of egg, 'pepper and salt to taste; then cook for onehalf hour without covering. Brown Bread Four cups of sour milk, one cup of brown sugar, seven cups graham flour, one teaspoon salt, two teaspoons soda, three tablespoons molasses. Mix dry ingredients, add molasses and sour milk. Bake one hour. Makes two loaves of sour milk brown bread. Salsify - Soup One quart salsify

roots, cleaned and peeled, one pint water, one quart or milk, salt and pepper. Cook roots in water until tender, add milk and bring to a boiling point, salt and pepper to taste. A little celery may be added it desired, codfish and dip in beaten egg and water and lay In Indian meal. The flakes should be fairly large an Inch square, say. place a cupful at a time in a wire basket and immerse in hot lard. In a minute they will be a delightful brown. Serve with finely choped dill pickle and some 'capers.

Bootlegger Refuses to Implicate Companions Charles J. Jones, of Indianapolis, who. under the name of Robert West has been in jail on a charge of bootlegging for about a week, received a fine of $50 and costs Thursday morning la circuit court. .Jones has been held in the hopes that he would reveal the names of the men working with him, but be would not implicate anyone. His story was that he had been hired to drive the car containing the liquor from a point east of Richmond to Indianapolis, without knowing its contents. He was arrested at Heiser's Crossing west of Centerville, when his car was damaged and its cargo smashed. He revealed his real name Thursday.

American Methods Used In Polish Election WASHINGTON, Feb. 20. American election methods and machinery were used In the recent election in Poland, the Polish bureau here was advised today in dispatches from Warsaw. Many of the methods used, the dispatch said, were at the suggestion of Premier Paderewskl, who with bis

Take Hood's Sarsaparilla Create Appetite, Give Strength

wife, were not permitted - to Tote through lack of sufficient residence in the country. ; All bars where intoxicating liquors are sold were closed on election day and soliciting of votes was prohibited within 160 feet of the polling booths.

Cl'T THIS OUT IT U WORTH MOlfBT DON'T MISS THIS. Cut out this Up. enclose with 6c and mail it to Foley & Co.. 2835 Sheffield Ave., Chicago. III., writing; your name and address clearly. You will receive in return a trial package containing- Foley's Honey and Tar Compound, for coughs, colds and croup; Foley Kidney Pills, for pain in sides and back; rheumatism, backache, kidned and bladder ailments; and Foley Cathartic Tablets, a wholesome and thoroughly cleansing- cathartic, for constipation, biliousness, headache, and sluggish bowels. For sale by A. G. Luken & Co. Adv. -..

Roman Vosmeier Sent To Fort Hospital

i i

Roman Vosmeier, wounded on Oct. 9

in the Argonne Forest, a member of -J

the 28th U. S. Infantry, has arrived with 19 other wounded Indiana soldiers at the Ft. Benjamin Harrison army hospital, according to a message received by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Vosmeier of this city. The bones in the soldier's lower left leg were shattered by a machine gun bullet, it is understood. -

ALKALI IN SOAP BAD FOR THE HAIR

Soap should be used very carefully, if you want to keep your hair looking its best. Most Eo.ps and prepared shampoos contain too much alkali. This dries the scalp, makes the hair brittle, and ruins it. The bc;t thing ror steady use is just ordinary mulsilljc' cocoanut o'" (wh h is pure and greaseless), end is better than the most expensive soap or anything else you can use. One or two teaspoonfuls will cleanse the hair ind scalp thoroughly. S!mplv moisten the hair with water and rub it in. It makes an abundance of rich, creamy lather, which rinses out easily, removing every particle o dus dirt, dandruff and excessive oil: i'he hair dries quickly and evenly, and it leaves the scalp soft, and the fine and silky, bright, lustrous, fluffy and easy to manage. You can get mulsified cocoanut oil at any pharmacy, it's vec cLeap, and a few ounces will supply every memtr of tt f-Tiily W moaths. Adv.

HOW WEAK, NERVOUS WOMEN QUICKLY GAIN VIGOROUS HEALTH AND STRONG NERVES 7 A DAY FOR 7 DAYS

TO RELIEVE CATARRH,

CATARRHAL DEAFNESS AND HEAD NOISES Persons suffering from catarrhal

deafness, or who are growing hard of hearing and have head noises, will be

glad to know that this distressing

affliction can usually be successfully' treated at home by an internal medicine that in many instances has effected complete relief after other treatments have failed. Sufferers who

could scarcely hear have had their j hearing restored to such an extent;

that the tick of a watch was plainly i

audible seven or eight inches away from either ear. Therefore, if you know of someone who is troubled with head noises or catarrhal deafness, cut

out this formula and hand it to them aud you may have been the means! of saving some poor suffexer perhaps from total deafness. The prescription j can be prepared at home and is made . as follows: J Secure' from your druggist 1 oz. Parmint (Double Strength). Take this' home and add to it V. pint of hot j

water and a little granulated sugar; stir until dissolved. Take one tablespoonful four times a day. Parmint is used in this way not only to reduce by tonic action the inflammation and swelling in the Eustachian 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 nearly always quick and effective Every person who has catarrh in any form, or distressing rumbling, hissing sounds in their ears, should give this recipe a trial. Adv.

A Vigorous, Healthy Body, Sparkling Eyes and Health-Colored Cheeks Come in Two Weeks, Says Discoverer of Bio-feren.

Worlld Grandest Health Builder Costs Nothing Unless It Gives to Women the Buoyant Health They Long For.

It i afe to say that right here in this big city are tens of thousands of weak, nervous, run-down, depressed women who in two weeks' time could make themselves so healthy, so attractive and so keen-minded that they would compel the admiration of all their friends. The vital health building elements that these despondent . women lack are all plentifully supplied in Bio-feren.

If you are ambitious, crave success In) life, want to have a healthy, vigorous j bdoy, clear skin and eyes that show no . dullness, make up your mind to get a j package of Bio-feren right away. j It costs but little and you can get an

original package at any druggist any where. Take two tablets after each meal and one at bedtime seven a day for seven days then one after meals till all are gone. Then if you don't feel twice as good, look twice as attractive and feel twice as strong as before you started your money is waiting for you. It belones to

you, for the .. discoverer of Bio-feren doesn't want one penny of it unless it fulfills all claims. Note to Physicians: There Is no secret about the formula of Bio-ferea. It is printed on every package. Here

phate; Iron Peptouate; Manganese Pen

i u ii ate , mat. nua t uiuiub ; rowfl. Hen Man: Phenolphthaleln; Olearaaln Cap

WEEK-END SALE OF GROCERIES SAVE MONEY HERE . 'Into Beans, 10c per lb; two or 19 )ry Peas. 15 lb.; 2 for 29 Navy Beans, per lb ..... . -QVz Brown Sugar, 2 lbs. for. ..21 Star Coap, 10 bars for 66 SunMaid Seadless Raisins, per package for 15 Quaker Pancake and Biscuit Flour, per pkg. 14 Boone Co. Beans, per can. .lO Baker's Cocanut fresh grated; 15 can; 2 for .........25 Post Toasties 13 PkS-r two tor 25 Logan Corn per can ...... 16 Onions, 5 per lb; 3 lbs...K) Hood's Pumpkin 13r per can; two for . 25 THE CASH AND CARRY GROCERY 7 S. 6th St. Phone 1702

"Made in Richmond"

Goiiiserve In Your Mome

INSIST UPON

Nothing But

The Bread of 100 Goodness

v.

Try ' n "in" '"" '

The Ric

If Bread Could Be Made Better We Would Make it

Fresh Daily at Your Grocers ORDER NOW AND EVERY DAY

imoed Bakk

"Made in Richmond"

New Georgette Blouses, all new shades, pretty styles, Friday and QQ Saturday .... V0

in G R A N' S

v

LADIES SHOP

Between 9th and 10th

923 Main Street

Sample Spring Suits Sample Spring Suits, beautiful and stunning new Spring 1919 models in all the new shades, Poplins, Serges, Poiret Twills, Velours and Silvertones ; Specially priced for Friday and Saturday at

$25.00

,C oats, Capes Dolmans The Newest Spring Types. A very wonderful grouping has been arranged for Friday and Saturday at these moderate prices $15 to $35 consisting of Serges, Poplins, Velours and Silvertones in all the new shades.

All Wool Skirts, inl Navy and Black only; newest styles in Serges and Poplins $12.00 ?flQ AO values ... . . . . . P0s)O

New Silk Dresses Taffetas, Satins, Crepe Meteors, newest spring models, b e a u t i f u 1 shades '.

$

15

( 1 .-. ;

-100Sample Serge Dresses -100for Ladies and lisses, all wool Serge Dresses, all shades, pretty styles, for Friday and Saturday only; $25 values $13.75

. New Shipment of - Trimmed Hats

It isn't often you see an announcement of hats of every description that are uncom

monly good in value, tastily trimmed and of-

f ering the choice of either large

or small effects. Priced . . . . .

Also plain banded styles are included in tb lot. Here are .values that every woman in Richmond will want to share in. ' r-i

$5.00

it

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