Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 44, Number 197, 31 May 1919 — Page 5

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM SATURDAY, MAY 31, 1919.

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V HEART AND BEAUTY I PPflRT FMS

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By Mr. Elizabeth Thompson

Dear Mrs. Thompson: I am twen-j ty years old and have never had a boy companion. I am tall, not pretty and very old of my age. Older men always like me. My father's friends take such an interest in me when they come to our home that father does not like it. But father's friends are all married and it doesn't help me to be liked by them. i wani a ooy companion so much, but don't know where to find one. What can I do to make them like me? The fact that you are old for your age probably explains your lack of boy friends. Young men of your own age do not enjoy you because you have an older mind than they have, and the older men of your acquaintance are, as you say, married. There Beems to be a divine law which attracts people to one another. I am conldent that without any effort on your part the much desired companion will come. Simply be hopeful and believe that what is your will come to you. ; Dear Mrs. Thompson: Can you tell me somthlng to do for my hair? It Is so oily I can hardly comb it.' I wash it, but it doesn't seem to do any good, because in about three days W a. - "nuu 11. is u uiijr B5 ueiure. M. Ij. The following is a tonic for oily air: Tincture of alcoholic cantharides, one dram, tincture of capsicum one-half dram; tincture of nux vomica, two drams; cocoa oil, three-quarters of an ounce; alcohol, two and one half ounces. Shake before using. Massage nightly into the scalp with 'the finger tips. Dear Mrs. Thompson? I am mar

HOUSEHOLD HINTS) By Mrs. Morton

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TESTE n RPRIPPS i Escalloped Potatoes Potatoes, salt, pepper, butter, milk, pimentos. Butter a baking dish, pare potatoes land slice thin, put In the baking dish a layer of potatoes and sprinkle with salt, pepper and a little butter, then another layer of potatoes, etc., until the dish is nearly full. Then fill with milk or cream. Add one-half can chopped pimentos and bake one and one-half hours. Beef Loaf One-half pound ground round steak, one-half cup cracker crumbs, one-half cup mashed potatoes, one egg, salt, pepper, two small ouions and milk to moisten. Mix, put in baking dish and put either one tablespoon butter over top. or lay a couple of slices of bacon over top and bake. Filled Cookie Two cups brown sugar, one cup shortening, two eggs, one-half cup sour milk, one-half teaspoon soda, two teaspoons baking powder, flour to make stiff , dough. Roll thin, put filling on one 'cookie, press other over it and bake. Filling: One cup raisins (ground), one cup water, one cup sugar, one teaspoon flour, one teaspoon cornstarch. Boil until thickened. Rhubarb Betty One pint fresh rhubark, one cup sugar, butter cinnamon. Fill casserole with alternate layers of the bread and rhubarb, having the top layer of bread. On each layer of bread put sugar, bits of butter or BRIDGING THE CHASM But Annie was loath to have her hard-working Aunt Margaret devote her evenings to teaching her the intricacies of stenography. "No, Aunt Moggie," she said firmly, "I know now what it is to work all day at a machine. I don't care whether it's my sewing machine or your typewriter. Nine hours' work a day takes most of your strength. But I'm young: I can stand it Besides, It's my problem. I'm going to night school. I know a girl who learned in six weeks. Her aunt smiled grimly and shook her head. "Yes I've heard that," she said, "but I've never known a person who did it, Nance. It's one thing to be able to write shorthand, and another to be able to read it Six months is nearer what you'll need." Nevertheless, with high hope Annie registered at a school near enough to walk to from the factory. There was not time to go home for dinner, so she stopped at a dairy lunchroom after work and ate fifteen cents' worth of buns or wheatcakes and coffee, ex perimenting with ainerent aisnes to see which made the bulkiest and most lasting meal for the money. It seemed to Annie in those days that she was never actually unhungry To have as much as she wanted to eat, three times a day, alone represented in her imagination a basis for happiness. At first night school was enlivening. The school building was new, with roomy desks, big blackboards and very bright lights. The teacher was young and brisk and wore pretty white shirtwaists with elbow sleeves. That sort of waist, Annie knew, was the 18-a-dozen line. That is, the men who ran the Circle Waist Company, where she worked, got $18 a dozen for making them, not counting the sleeves and the hemming round the bottom. That was separate work. The girls who tewed the sleeves got 16 cents a dozIrents who care for their chil- M dren's health will give them INSTANT POSTUM instead of cofifee

ried to a returnd soldier. We were neighbors and friends for years and did not think of marrying until he had to go away. Then he asked me to marry him and I consented. He has come home now and we are living together In a little house of our own which his father gave us for a wedding present. When my husband went away I thought I loved him,' but I did not know what love was. He and I cannot get along together, but the more we quarrel the more I care for him. It is strange, but I think he cares for me, too. When we have quarrelled he always does something to make up without saying he is sorry. He brings me candy or something he thinks I will like. I am worried about our quarrels. We go for days without speaking, because I think it is the man's place to say he is sorry and not try to make up with a basket of pansies. What would you advise in our case? LOVING WIFE. It Is not the man's place to say he Is sorry, because he is not always In the wrong. His little peace offerings should be accepted lovingly and the misunderstanding should be forgotten. Apologies are not necessary; being cheerful and doing the right thing after the misunderstanding is far more Important than an apology.

Love your husband too much to carry chips. If you are forgiving, I am sure that he will be. In time you will adjust yourselves to each other and wil be happy, or else you will quarrel more and more until you kill one another's love. The future depends entirely upon your self-con trol now. oleomargarine and a dash of cinna mon. When filled pour on cold water until nearly to brim. Bake slowly one-half hour then brown quickly. Serve cold with whipped cream. DISCOVERIES. iexi ume you cook prunes aaa a few slices of lemon to improve the flavor, or you may prefer the flavor of spices, in which case place a small bag of spices in the saucepan while the prunes are cooking. Any of the following vegetables will go nicely with beefsteak: Brus sels sprouts, cauliflower, ouions, squash, peas, beets, tomatoes, (either stewed or scalloped), salsify and mac aroni. Have the potatoes baked. fried or creamed. Sweet potatoes are a savory accompaniment if baked or broiled. Before putting milk on to boil for puddings, etc, grease the cooking vessel with butter and you will avoid the annoyance of having the milk burn to the bottom. After broiling steak spread it with creamed butter, mixed with lemon juice and chopped parsley. You can seed raisins in half the usual time if you pour boiling water over them. en pairs. Hemming brought 4 cents per dozen waists. When a girl be came expert enough to make three or four dozen waists a day she was generally taken off piecework and paid by the week about $12 a week. For the first few nights Annie was stimulated by the novelty of her study. It seemed a miracle that those straight lines and curves could in time mean words and phrases, and be read as clearly and rapidly as print. But as the lessons progressed from the simple "pee-bee; chap-Jay; kay-gay; sh-zh," to the joined consonants, "p-k, b-g," etc., and the complex addition of the dotted and dashed vowels, Annie felt her brain functioning stiffly. She had schooled herself in the factory not to think. When she tried to think her needle ran off the seam, her thread snapped, her needle broke. She was reprimanded by the floor manager. She lost time and earned less money. Her mind had forfeited its nimbleness. To change over from manual to mental labor Annie found to be a task of far greater difficulty than she dreamed. There seemed an unbridg able chasm between. "You must put your mind on your lesson. Miss Hargan, said a voice at her elbow. "You have written "back for 'Jack.' Don't you know yet that b slants from left to right and T from right to left? Annie pulled heself together, the nerves throughout her weary body strained to their utmost effort. The next night it was even worse. An un conquerable lassitude gripped her. She felt numb and indifferent. , Her brain refused to be whipped into action. Her eyelids drooped. "Come, come I can't have pupils falling asleep over their work! Miss Hargan! I'm surprised at you. You win nave to do better than that. The rebuke galvanized Annie from her doze. It took every bit of will power to keep awake and go through tne motions of her composing, copy ing, transcribing. That night as she stumbled upstairs and fell into bed her courage almost failed. She was too exhausted to rest, and tossed about till daylight. (To be continued.) BORAH PLEADS IRISH CAUSE WASHINGTON, May 31. The American Peace delegation would be "earnestly requested" to secure a hear ing before the Peace Conference for leaders in the movement for independ ence of Ireland under a resolution introduced today by Senator Borah, Re

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questions by the simple application of the fourteen points or of any other formula. An example: . Banat. claimed by Hungarians, Serbs and Rumanians, is actually inhabited by half a score of races no one of which is in the majority. There are more Rumanians than Serbs or Hungarians, but there are several hundred thousand Germans. Further, an ethnological division would result in economic paralysis, since it would give one country a larger part of territory but another all railroad and river outlets. To solve the Austro-Hungarian problem by faithful appreciation of the right of self determination, would be to create a crazy quilt To settle it on the basis of economic interests would be to perpetuate chaos by continuing a mixture of races, and yet some solution, some settlement, must be made. Peace Progress Threatened At the present moment, we have seen the whole progress of the peace conference threatened by the dispute of the Jugo Slavs and Italians over Flume. A temporary compromise for this question may be found; a solution remains, practically speaking, im possible. There is not a well informed ob server In Paris who does not believe that war between the Italians and the Jugo-Slavs is a moral certainty within the next decade. We have removed the peril of Italia Irrendenta, but de spite the best intentions of the Paris conference, a new Irredenta has been created on the Adriatic. Moreover the old tendency towards combination is reasserting itself. Italian policy and Roumanian policy march towards a common alliance against Jugo-Slavs, since Roumania claims all of Banat and Italy the Jugo Slav regions on the Adriatic. A similar drift of Hungarian policy towards Germany is inevitable, since Hungary will find herself with out natural frontiers and reduced from a state of twenty million to an insig nificant republio of seven. German Austria has already demanded union with Germany. In uniting Czechs, Slovaks and Ruthenians, South Carpathians, the Paris conference has liberated large numbers of Slavs, but the new state it has created defies all rules of national ex istence. It extends transversly across mountains; railroads and highways, uniting east with west do not exist and cannot be built and if the Czechs and Slovaks have been united of their own wish, the Ruthenians will clamor for unity with the Ukraine. Beside the solution of the Austrian problem, the German question is trivial. Actually, in creating half a dozen new states we have raised twice as many new problems. Exactly as the liberation of the Greeks, Bulgars and Serbs led to immediate rivalry between these three new states, a rivalry which provoked at least two wars between Serbia and Bulgaria and one between Greece and Bulgaria, we have now prepared the way for similar conflicts between Poles and Czechs, be-i tween Poles and Ukranians, Czechs and Ukranians, Roumanians and Ukranians, Magyars and Roumanians, Magyars and Czecho-Sloyaks, Jugoslavs and Roumanians, Jugo-Slavs and Italians, and Jugo Slavs and Austrians. Sees Single Solution. In all this welter of conflicting national aspirations a single solution is discoverable, although it seems today impossible to realize. The reunion of at least a portion of Austria-Hungary in economic if not political federation, the association of Czecho-Slovaks, Hungarians, Roumanians, Jugo-Slavs and German-Austrians. This may lead in time to the creation of a situation of peace and co-operation. But two great powers will set their faces against such solution: Italy, which fears that such a federation would contest its supremacy on the Adriatic, Germany, which hopes to acquire Austria and, by preserving anarchy to the southward, keep alive the opportunity to re-create Mittel Europa, which was her dominating ambition before and during the war. It must be apparent that the treaty of St Germain which we are presently to make with Austria, and the subse quent treaty which we shall make with Hungary, will in fact settle noth ing. To liquidate the Austro-Hungarian empire will at least be as compli cated and difficult an operation as the liquidation of the Turkish empire in Europe, which has taken a hundred MEASLES Brazilian Balm prevents Measles, Scarlet Fever, Mumps, Chicken Pox and all other Contagious diseases. It also kills the germs and CURES in 3 or 4 days. I nev er allowed them to enter my family. B. F. Jackson, pro prietor. Suits Dry Cleaned and Pressed $1.25 SUITS PRESSED, 60o CARRY AND SAVE PLAN x Altering. Repairing and Pressing done by practical tailors JOE MILLER, Prop. 617V? Main Street Second Floor. Dr, J, J. Grosvenor Practice Limited to Internal Medicine City Light Building, 32 S. 8th St

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years, and Is not yet complete. In

fact the war has simply extended the Eastern question from the shores of the Bosporus to the frontiers ot Germany. In place of the little Balkan states which have kept Europe in an uproar for half a century, we have created a dozen larger states, equally certain to threaten the peace of Europe. With these races the league of Nations can have no weight, since whatever the situation in the west of Europe, nationalism still remains rampant in the east Th solution of the questions Involved on the basis of the fourteen points, brings no aid, because in all major conflicts each side can with equal justice Invoke at least one of these points to support its contention. Is 'More Important In sum it is essential for Americans to recognize that so far as the peace of the world Is concerned, the Austrian settlement is even more important than the German and that the possibilities of permanent adjustment are far less numerous. Actually, the war, by destroying the central authority of the Hapsburg monarchy has released races whose rivalries are at least a thousand years old. These races are unwilling to submit their claims to the linal decision of the League of Nations as were the Balkan races to subordinate theirs to the will of the concert of Europe. However, boundaries may be drawn hundreds of thousands of people will in the nature of things be subjected to a rule they will not recognize. The Germans will be placed under Slavs, Slavs under Italians, Hungarians under Roumanians, Poles under Ukranians, and Ukranians under Poles, and such a situation can only lead to new crlsises. Already the Italians and Roumanians have threatened to leave the peace conference if their claims are not recognized, while the Poles have defied the Paris conference in Eastern Gallcia, and the Serbs are preparing to resist the Italians on the Adriatic, where, as always, peace is only preserved by temporary expedients. Theoretically, the intervention of the League of Nations Is without power, and all economic weapons will in the briefest time, have little weight. Conceivably the great powers will be able to stop outside the area of conflict until the races involved have settled their own disputes, but on the other hand, in the Balkans this was never possible, and the dispute between Bulgaria, Serbia and Greece over territory hardly as large as Connecticut dragged the world into the most stu pendous conflict of human history, 'ine iviedco Company, Dayton. Ohio.

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the end of. which sees the Balkan question still unsettled, and all Middle and Eastern Europe Balkanized. Such, then, are some ot the aspects of the problems bosed by the arrival of the Austrians at St Germain, and

the opening of the task of liquidating ! the Austro-Hungarian Empire. Mrs. E. Brown Tells How Cuticura Heals Pimples On Face "My face be?an to itch ma ttvriMv that I could not help scratching it mna soon it began to itcn u tne way down my snouiders. In a few days pimples appeared that disfigured me ao I was ashamed to be seen. They were unbearable and I eouU not sleep nights. . "I suffered for two years when I saw an advertisement for Cuticura. I purchased them and in two months I was healed, after using two cakes of Soap and two boxes of Ointment". (Signed) Mra. K. Brown. 7M Tnlana Ave., Chicago, 111., July 11, 1918. vCuticuraTofletTrioa Consisting of Cuticura Soao. Oint ment and Talcum, promote and maintain skin nuritv and ViMith Don't wait to have your complexion disfigured by pimples and blackbeads, redness and rowhnea. Pre vent it by making this remarkable kin-clearine comclexion loan vrrnr every -day toilet soap, assisted by touches of Cuticura Ointment, mnw and then as needed, to the first signs r . . . , . . . " 01 ucue stun ana scaip troubles. In purity. fracrrance and delicate mira tion Cuticura Soap is wonderful. Ii.(kla T..k m W W.lf A jj . Soap tSc. Qmtmant and Me. TaleomaSe. KAZIMOVA In THE. RED LANTERN

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