Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 44, Number 154, 11 April 1919 — Page 5

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM FK1DAY, APRIL 11, 1919.

HEART AND BEAUTY

PROBLEMS

By Mr. Elizabeth Thompson

Daar Mrs. Thompson: I kept company with a young man about four months, but I knew Mm for five years before we started to go together. He is poor and not very goodlooking. but he has always treated me fine with honor and respect, and never wanted me to go with " boys he knew did not have a good reputation. As I had a good name he wanted me to keep it. But I longed forthe company of those boys and what I thought was a good time, and so I gave him up. Now they have my name down and don't care anything for me. I hare tried to regain this young man's

friendship, as I nave round i love nun and It will break my heart to give him up. He is going with another girl and I hoard fhe thinks a great deal of him and he has the same respect for her ho had for me. How can I win his love back. I can't think of giving him up and so please give me some encouragement. BROKEN-HEARTED. The price which a girl has to pay for some mistakes is very great. I am afraid you will find it so. But it will be worth while to pay it and be square. Stop associating with undesirable people of either sex. It will be better, to bo lonely for a time and in the end you will regain a better class of friends. If I were you I would take up some study. This will help you oc4 cupy your mind and will improve it at the same time. Read and attend lectures, because this will assist greatly

SOLDIERS, MINUS HAND, LEARN READILY TO USE OTHER ONE

in making you interesting to a better

class of people.

Almost notmng is lmpussiuio t.-v want a .1 thinz enough to

go after it in the right way. It will not be easy to regain the friendship of the young man, but you can do it if you work hard enough. When he sees your effort to change and to get away from undesirable associations, he will respect you very much. If you make your personality lovable and cultured there is a chance that he will love jou again. Have you the strength of character

to work so hard? I Deueve you

Dear Mrs. Thompson: Kindly advise what to do for nits on the hair. Give a formula that will not hurt the hair or skin. I have tried washing it several times, but this does not help it Tell me where to get it and how to make It and tell me hojrtojw- it. Get a package of larkspur at the drug store. Steep it slowly until you have made a strong tea. Vv ash the . . lot it drv on. After

the hair is dry pick off the dead nits

which cling to the nair.

i-. f, TVinmriHnn: (1) Who

should buy a bride's wedding clothes, . . ycr hriilperoom?

s t nm seventeen. What length

'"'u ,.n,t.h' TRESSE.

(1) The girl's parents should pro- . , . ui-nt fOrtthea

viae ner rauiu6 , . (2) A seventeen-year-old girl should

wear her dresses to ner snoe iuv.

HOUSEHOLD HINTS

By Mrs. Morion

MENU HINT. Breakfast. Canned Cherries Cereal and Cream Giblets on Toast Coffee Luncheon Tomato Soup Potato Salad

Toast Cookies iea Dinner Onion and Pepper Canape Celery Brown Beef Stew with Dumplings Mashed Potatoes Cauliflower Lettuce Apple Pie Coffee RECIPES FOR A DAY. Emince of Giblets on ToastPick the meat from tne neck and add the minced giblets, add two hard-boiled eggs, chopped fins. Now place one tablespoonful of butter in a Bauce-pan and add the prepared giblets and eggs. Then dust over two tablespoonfuls of flour. Toss gently and cook for about five minutes. Now add one cupful of milk. Bring to a boll and cook for five minutes. Season' and add one tablespoonful of finely minced parsley. Servo on slices of toast. Cheese Croquettes Two cups (onehalf round) grated cheese, two cups f fh soft breadcrumbs, one cup cream

sauce, one teaspoon salt, one quarter teaspoon paprika, one teaspoon Worcestershire sauce, two eggs. Put cheese and crumbs into top of double boiler; add cream sauce, seasoning and one well-beaten egg; mix well; set over boiling water and boil until thinck; stir frequently. Spread on platter, set in cold place for two hours, form into small cones or balls with floured hands and dip into wellbeaten egg, then in bread-crumbs. Fry in deep, hot dripping or cooking oil.

TVo it s hnva who lost a hand

or an arm in service now find it necessary to teach the remaining member the work the lost hand and arm formerly did. One class in the reconstruction hospital at Colonia, N. J is for these lads. The two at the left are learning to write with their left hands. The boy at the right, before the intructor, wrote with his left hand before he lost it. The toy auto was made by another maimed hero. He used a cocoa can for the radiator, the bottom of it beinsr the engine. The wheels are the tops of adhesive tape boxes. The eas tank is a tooth powder can. The lamps are caps from tooth paste tubes. Its cylinders are empty cartridge shells.

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Below soldiers learning to write with other hand after foe shell has taken their writing hand. Above is toy racing auto designed from odds and ends by disabled soldier while recovering from loss of one of nil members.

DIVORCE OCCUPIES COURT

The divorce case of May Saines

versus Robert Saines, begun Thursday, occupied circuit court all day Friday. Minnie B. Krone filed suit

arntnst Julia, and Walter J. Pleasant

for $180 alleged to be due on a note

and for foreclosure on a mortgage.

WITH THE WOMEN OF TODAY

Why the Young Women's Christian

Association is a member of the women's Joint legislative committee, which is nrpnentina: Drotective legislation foi

including an eight-hour day. minimum

wage and transportation bills, oerore the state legislature will be told by

Miss Louise Gllman, lnaustnai secretary of the Metropolitan board of the Y. W. C. A. in cities throughout New York state during the next two weeks.

Mtcs r.tlman will meet memoers or

the governing boards of local Y. W. C. A.'s In the cities where she goes, as

well as members of Industrial gins clubs, women's clubs or any other groups which desire to be informed nn th bills. She will give the argu

ments for and against the bills with

a view of helping women to an intelligent understanding of them. "The Y. W. C. A. joined the Consumer's league, the Women's Trade ttyi lpnnm and the Woman Suf-

f nortv . form the woman's Joint

legislative conference in order to draw

up and pass this legislation aaecung the working hours and wages of woben." says Miss Gllman, "because the Y. M. C. A. sands for the protection of young women, and labor legislation is one of the best ways to get this protection. Eight hour day, health insurance, minimum wage and elevator and transportation bills are In line with our Industrial program. ,It Is also part of our duty to see that women are intelligently informed on these bills. Industrial clubs in Y. W. C. A.'s throubhout the state are studying them. On my trip I will tell how similar laws in European countries have stodd the test." HERE AND THERE. From fresco paintings of women in Creton palaces of about 2000 B. C, it is learned that women of that time

9- ' -1

nun

'1

Miss Louise Gllman.

pinched In their waists, wore elaborate ; coiffures, shoes with high heels and

hats that might have come from a

Parisian hat shop. Mrs. Lillian Baldwin, an Oakland. Calif, woman, fasted thirty-five days and reduced her weight 38 pounds. , She is in perfect health and claims: that she will fast again when she wishes to reduce her weight. i Read Palladium Want Page

0!Tiii:aniiui!iincnnn!i!!ni!aE:ininnii!n!ian!:nnm!r.ii!

Eanana Pie Bake rich pie-crust TV, on aiif nrothpr twn PffCS Well beat

an tViroo-nnartf r cud suear. one table'

cunnn rf rni'Ti ttt h vch one Dint milk,

rn teasDoon vanilla. Put in double

boiler, cook until thick.

when cool slice two or tnree Da-

nanas in crust, pour custard on all. tjoot irMtoa nf pete's with one table-

spoon of sugar, spread on top and bake

in oven till nice ana Drown. DISCOVERIES. Always keep a pair of kitchen shears in the kitchen along with other cooking utensils. Following are some of the uses to which they may be put: -Cutting parsley, lettuce, pimento, etc., or garnishes; trimming ham, bacon, steak, etc., cut centers from grape fruit and oranges, hulling strawberries, gooseberries and the like. Spring cleaning time is coming and blankets must be washed. This requires much soap and the finer it is

shaved the quicker the wont is aone. Instead of paying a high price for this at the store shave a good white soap with a common plane by tacking a thin piece of wood to a bench or box, and placing the cake of soap against it. When the bar gets too small, turn the plane over and draw i vi iaat small niece of Boan across the

plane; in this manner every bit of soap can be shaved into very thin flakes that dissolve immediately.

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RECEPTION FOR MRS. WILSON

(By Associated Press) PARIS, Thursday, April 10. The Ina. Aincd r.lub will hold a reception

next Monday afternoon in honor of

Mrs. Woodrow Vvilson.

1

National Crop Improvement Servlce.l MANY theorists who are Old enough to know better are advocating that a man who profluccs all that he can on his farm Is foolish, because they have noted at rorious times that small crops have lold for more money in the aggregate Ihan larger crops. -Suppose in a crop-failure year that corn should go to $10 a bushel? If you have no corn whnt good would that do you? Would It be better for a few fanners who have corn to make big money out of the farmers in the cmp-fallure section and others who have no corn? "Suppose every man should cut down his acrense of cotton to boost the price. Would the man with the smallest amount of cotton get rich? Nobody asks you to grow cotton at a loss; there are hundreds of things ihot run be successfully grown at a

front. Why be a 6lave to cotton? But hen you do grow cotton, grow on each acre all you can profitably produce. In order to do this you will i.,,i tf know the cost of fertilizer,

labor, etc. Then It la a matter of

v rltlimptlo.

"There are planters who make money year after year In cotton. They

enn make money often wnen you ran i, Whose fault is it? Many fall in busl ,aY.irminir as well as merchandls

lng. If you can't make it pay get

out of It. Mai Ewerv Acre Work Profitably.

tr,. nHnpinie Involved Is the same

is In manufacturing. The student of

economics knows that ir a piant a ta its full capacity there Is

a consequent loss in the return on the Investment. The same Is true on an cr of land," said Mr. Frank Baackes, rice-president of the American Steel ft Wire company, when asked about .v- Mti.i situation. "In the press

lervice of one of, our middle states colleges, the dean says, 'None of our . irA teachlne the farmer

that It Is either his duty or to his

greater advantage unaer pence Tions to secure a maximum produc-

tlpn regardless or. otner ewuuum,.

cMoratinns! Exactly so: but sucu

advice roust be made definite In order

that the lazy and Inefficient may not take it as an excuse to loaf on the

lob.

"it ta tme that if every factory lu

the United States should make noth-

ir hut fniinr buttons we would soon

have more collar buttons than could

be disposed of; and the same thing is

tniP of fnrmtne. Do not be misiea

every farmer must produce all of the

corn, oats, hay, forage, wheat, sirup.

trich nnri sweet notatoes. vegetables,

milk, butter, fruit and all other prod

ucts of the soil first, to properly nourish his own household, and, second, to

feed the outside world.

Distribution Usually to Blame. "The trouble Is not usually In over

production. Distribution is to hiame

for most of the trouble, aitnougn ui course there Is always the dangel that too many farmers will manufac

ture collar buttons, so to speaK, wnen they ought to be balancing the world's ration.

Th hnrcan of markets has under

taken this problem that is, to advise

so far as possible what to grow, out the farmer Is doing as he always has done. If the price of potatoes is high

tn tho fall he Erows potatoes until ne

gluts the market. Next year he grows

no potatoes, and the tnira year iuft. nr hieh acain. The wise man

does not attempt to keep all of bis

eggs In one basket.

Th farm is a factory ana tne

same advice is given to farmers that

has been adopted by other maufaeturers: 'You can't make a profit

unless you know your costs. Stand

ardize your products. "No market scheme, whether of cooperation or legislation, can long maintain a superior price for an Inferior commodity. "Farmers should first maintain themselves and family and labor on their own farms; and this applies to cotton In the South and to wheat in the North. I have no patience with a pile of tin cans at the back door of the farmhouse."

II

H H II

omethin

2 New!

Hng

Something -Different 0

Out d the Ordinary

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THE NEW DISPLAY CIRCLE IN KNOLLENBERG'S STORE LOCATED JUST AT THE MAIN STREET ENTRANCE This circle of cases will be used for displaying not only the newest creations that can be used for your personal adornment, but the very finest ofxwvdtjes ZZtnTfroL every department of our entire store. We expect to make this display counter so attractive that you will gaze with amazement

Come in Saturday and see this display then go through the various departments and see the endless number ot master suggestions.

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EASTER SUITS

Surely nothing could be more fitting

for the Easter promenade than a chick suit, selected from this particularly stunning-modes now featured on our second floor. Lively selling is predicted, for seldom are such pleasing styles priced so advantageously. Prices

$75

BEAUTIFUL NEW BLOUSES Beautiful Blouses of Georgette, Crepe de Chine and Satin. Some are trimmed with an endless number of pretty buttons, some have elegant designs of colored beads while others have dainty hemstitched collars and cuffs embroidered with the new celesta silk.

Prices

$5.00, $6.50, $7.00, $8.00, $10.00 BLOUSES of very fine Georgette with handsome eyelet embroidery and elegant Venice maddalions. Price $12.00 to $16.50

Easter Hosiery

Ladies' Silk Hose in all the desirable shades. White,' Black, Grey, Suede, May Brown, Cordovan and Shell Fink. Price pair $2.00 Ladies' Silk Hose Black and White; price palr"l.50-$1.75 Ladies' Silk Hose Special lot to close Brown, Grey, White and Black; pair... 88c

New Easter Veilings Buy your veil to match your suit Hundreds of patterns to select from, meshes of every description, including the now popular Trench Mesh, at per yard 25c to 75c New patterns in close fitting veils, with elastic edge, each 25c to 50c

Easter Gloves

Ladie3 Trefousse French Kid Gloves, Black, White, Brown and Grey with neat embroidered backs per pair $3.50 Ladles' Dorothy French Kid Gloves Black, White, Grey, Brown and Tan, per pair $2.75 Ladies' Kayser Silk Gloves Black, White, Grey, Pongee and Mastic; plain and contrast backs per pair from ..$1.25 to $2.00 Ladies' Silk Gloves Black, White, Grey and Pongee; pair 85c Ladies' Kayser Silk Gloves White and Black; pair 75o

Easter Neckwear Neckwear is an item that no woman overlooks, especially when the variety is as pleasing and the styles as gratifying as we are now offering. Frills of all kinds, collars of plaiting with narrow filet lace edge. Here you also find those new vestees that are right up to the minute. Ask to see these new goods. Price 50c to $5.00

Easter Handkerchiefs Beautiful White Embroidered Handkerchiefs with narrow hemstitched edge, sheer quality; each.... 25c One counter dainty Crepe de Chine Handkerchiefslarge variety colors. Price each 25c Very fine plain Linen Handkerchiefs with very narrow hemstitched edge; price each 20, 25, 35 &50c

EASTER PURSES AND HAND BAGS Ladies' Purses and Hand Bags Hundreds upon hundreds of fine Purses in all the new leathers; some are lined with leather, while others are lined with beautiful silk and fitted with powder puff and mirror, strap back and top handles. If it's a purse you are looking for, we can please you. Price from $1.00 to $10.00

MEET ME AT THE CIRCLE in

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