Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 44, Number 306, 8 October 1919 — Page 5
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, WEDNESDAY, OCT. 8, 1919.
IP AGE FIVE
Heart and Beauty Problems By Mrs. Elizabeth Thompson
t.., ''"V.nmr.-.ri . j am a girl 18 years of age and I have been chuma ..ili ti. pn. till. ca.Ut aftt'. 1 .vjv'ti her !ike a sister and we seemed to agree on every subject but recently we had a quarrel. We had been going to dances together and at a dance one night i certain young man asked me for a dance. Of course I accepted and I have fallen deeply in love with him. He had taken my girl friend and me home about a half a dozen times when he asked me for ft date and I accepted. My girl frield got angry because I went with him, but she got over it. Then I made another date and she said things in his presence that hurt him. Since then she and 1 have not spoken. She thought he ought not to have asked me for a date because she and I were chumming together. Don't you think she was wrong and ought to apologize? At present I am going steady with this man. He Is highly respected. One thing puzzles me, however. I can not find anything to talk about when I am with him. Can you suggest to me what to talk about and how to become interesting? He wants to see me about three nights a week, but I am afraid I might grow tired of him if I saw him that often. How many nights should he call and what days? CUPID. Your girl friend was wrong, of course, but you should forgive her without her apologizing. She misses your companionship and feels keenly the fact that you attracted the young man and she did not. Show her your love now more than ever before.
To become better acquainted and to find talking easier you must do things together. If you read and take walks you will find that your hours together pass more quickly. You might make candy occasionally. Tf , mi Ark mnt anlnv tho vnnncr man
enough to let him come three nights j
a week, do not let him. Three nights are really too many since you are not engaged. Let him come twice a week if you will enjoy him that often, and do not have any regular nights. He should come when it is most convenient for you.
Dear Mrs. Thompson: I am a boy of nineteen and am going with a girl of eighteen. I am very much in love with her, but she does not seem to return it. Nevertheless, she always asks me to come back. I am quite well fixed financially and have often wondered if that was the center of her attraction. One Sunday night I saw her with another boy. but on asking her if she still cared to go with me she indignantly declared all innocence of ever being with that boy. She appears to be two faced, but I still love her. Please advise mc what to do. WORRIED Go with other girls too. This will show you more quickly than anything else how the girl feels about you. If she cares, she will not want you to go with others. Both of you are too young to go exclusively with each other. Of course the girl should not have lied. You are wise, however, to appreciate her good qualities and love her for them.
other day that set me thinking. "Many work capably, unselfishly and energetically at the Job (of marriage) and make a great success of it To such as do the job well the rewards are greater than any to be obtained elsewhere in the world. "In business, if you make a great success, there may come a time when people suggest that you might get out and give others a chance. Not so with marriage. If you win out in matrimony nobody wants you to quit Everybody wants you to keep right on, stay in the neighborhood and come around for the evening. "Marriage furnishes every man a chance to be a great man." The writer didn't say anything about women. I think it takes a greater woman to be a successful wife than it does a man to be a succesful husband. Women have more ideals about marriage than men. They not only have to survive the shattering of many of these ideals, but they have the heavy task of making the home, keeping attractive, rearing children and overcoming the handicap of independence. What I have written here has been going through my mind all day. When Jim came home he said. "Why, sweetness, how pretty you look! Been to a party? Oh, I know; it's because we're going to New York! I knew you'd come around to it." Yes, I have come around to it. But not in the way Jim means. (To be continued)
DECREASE IS NOTED IN LARGE FORTUNES BY REVENUE BUREAU
WASHINGTON, Oct. S Despite the popular belief that the number of large fortunes has increased during the last few years, income statistics made public today by the bureau of internal revenue showed a considerable decrease for 1917 of those reporting incomes in excess of $150,000, but a marked increase in those reporting net incomes of less than 150,000 The figures were considered even more surprising as regards incomes of a million dollars and over. There was a decrease of 65 in such incomes during the period of the report, 206 beine: reported in 1916, and only 141 in 1917. A total of 3,472,890 personal income tax returns were filed during the calendar year 1917. The net income reported on these returns amounted to $13,552,3S3,207, an increase of 3.035.S54 in the number of returns and of $7.353,805.587 in net incomes over the
corresponding figures for the preced-'
ing calendar year. The large increase is attributed to the lower exemption of the act of October 3, 1917, and partly to the general rise in the scale of wages, salaries and other forms of compensation. Of the total number of personal returns filed, 47 per cent reported net incomes of from J1.000 to $2,000, and 53 per cent reported net incomes in excess of $2,000. There were 315 returns showing net incomes of from $500,000 to $1,000,000, and 141 returns showing incomes of $1,000,000 and over.
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HOOSIER BOY WINS PRIZE
CHICAGO, Oct. 8. Clarence Rogers of Marshall county, Indiana, the Hoosier representative in the Boys' Cattle Judging contest at the National Dairy Show, being held here this week, land- ! ed in fourth place. He won $65 and a bronze medal.
Cigarette smoking among London women is now being varied by the occasional sight of a woman in a restaurant smoking a cigar.
Household Hints By Mrs. Morton
TOMATO RECIPES. Tomato Puree Small, irregular and undersized tomatoes may be made into puree or soup. Wash the tomatoes, cook until tender, run through a colander and put over the fire again. Concentrate to from one-half to one-third the original volume. This concentrated sauce is then canned and processed in the same manner a3 canned tomatoes. Soup Mixture One quart thick tomato pulp, two cups of corn or small lima beans, two cups or okra, with reasoning of salt, pepper, sugar and f liced onion. Prepare vegetables, pack into sterilized jars and process for three hours. Other vegetable combinations may be used but one should always remember to cook the mixture the length of time required by the vegetable which lequires the longest cooking. For example when corn is used, allow three hours. If corn is omitted nd beans require the longest time then allow two hours or the time required by the beans.
TASTY DESSERTS. A Delicious Pear Dessert Take onehalf dozen of medium sized, good flavored pears, peel, core and slice into
eighths. Make a sugar syrup with onehalf cupful of water; to this add onehalf cupful of cranberry juice. Simmer the pears in this syrup until tender; then carefully remove to a dish. To a cupful of the syrup add one ounce of melted chocolate, bring to the boil, then stir in one tablespoon of gelatine that has been dissolved in a little cold water. Line a mold with thin slices of stale sponge cake, place the pears on this end then pour over the chocolate jelly, flavored with a teaspoonful of vanilla. Chill, turn out and serve with whipped cream. Canadian Halibut Arrange 6 thin slices of fat pork, 2 1-2 inches square, in a dripping pan. Cover with 1 small onion thinly sliced and a bit of bay leaf. Wipe a two-pound piece of halibut and place over pork and onion. Baste with 3 tablespoons butter creamed and mixed with 3 tablespoons flour. Cover with 3-4 cup buttered cracker crumbs and arrange thin strips of fat salt pork over crumbs. Cover with buttered paper and bake fifty minutes in a moderate oven, removing paper the last fifteen minutes of cooking to brown the crumbs. Garnish with pieces of lemon and parsley.
Ohio News Flashes
HAMILTON Mrs. Carrie Kincaid, 50 years old, wife of Floyd E. Kincaid, was killed when struck by an automobile operated by Mrs. George I. Thelle. Mrs. The'.le is now on a $1,000 bond, pending a hearing for manslaughter. YOUNGSTOWN The Ohio Library association will meet here October 13, 14 and 15. Miss Olive Jones, Columbus, will make the president's address and a number of well-known librarians will talk.
She Married An Average Man
BY ZOE BECKLEY
So we are going to New York. I am not consulted; merely told by my husband that "We are going." Marriage is a good deal harder to manage than I dreamed. Jim seems to do all the managing. Something snapped in my heart last night when Jim announced so masterfully that we are going to leave Centerville. Not that 1 shall refuse to go unless he explains his financial affairs and his exact arrangement with Charles Belton, or make a scene, or go home to mother, or have nervous prostration. In novels and melodramas the ignored wife plunges into a reckless love affair or raises an awful ruption and "gets her rights." In real life most wives put up ith what they have to and find a common sense way out of the rest. There are three courses open to me. 1 can start my married life by bowing to my husband's wii! in all matters and be a nice, mangy little door-ir.at. People will speak of me as "sweet" and "such a good wife." I can oppose him, quarrel, cry, nag and degenerate into a vinegary virago. People will call me a "she-devil."
"a strong-minded female" of the "I-don't-blame-him-for-leaving her type. Or I can quietly build up some interests of my own. This is the course I have resolved upon. I love myself too much to take the door-mat course. I love Jim too much to take the virago course. I love life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness too much not to take the third course. For this way I believes lies our own mutual wellbeing. When I earned my living, before I married Jim, I had an irascible old employer who hated to have me ever change anything he dictated. He never wanted to be told, even when he made mistakes. I had some awful tilts with him. I nearly "chucked my job." Then I found I could make the corrections without consulting him and he was lamblike, even appreciative. Now I have a permanent job marriage. Virtually the same situation confronts me. I won't resign from it, and I hardly think Jim will fire me. I am going to hold this job successfully if I die in the attempt.
i 1 read something in a magazine the
The Best Health-Insurance Is a Glean Colon THERE ARE TWO WAYS of insuring yourself against disease. One is to pay bi premiums to an insurance company which will pay you so much a week when you get sick. And if you get sick, most of this money will have to go to the doctor who tries to muitc you well again. THE BEST WAY is to keep the disease-resisting forces of the .body so well organized and equipped as to guarantee health. Then you can enjoy life right along, and make it pay you premiums instead of paying premiums on a policy. This can be done only by keeping the colon clean and free from c!ogRin. 1 or the most eminent medical authorities tell us that about 90 of the sickness we have is directly or indirectly due to constipation. Nujol is the best health insurance "policy" in existence, because it keeps the colon clear and clean without deranging or weakening any of the other orpans. It is the only foe of constipation which has no unp!ea.sar.t or dangerous "come-back". Nujol is not a drug. Every particle of it that goes into the body comes out of the body. But on its journey it softens any mass that may be impacted in the colon and lubricates the way so as to make it easy for nature to move the obstruction and properly get rid of it. Nujol never interferes with digestion or any functions of any organ. It i not absorbed by those miiiions of little "mouths" in the intestine which suck in nourishment from the food passed along by the stomach. Its sole job is to keep things moving in an orderly, comfortable way. And it docs this without any pain does it equally well for babies, children, adults and aged folk. Try Nujol. Get a bottle from your druggist today. For valuable health booklet "Thirty Feet of Danger" free, urite Nujol Laboratories, Standard Oil Co. (New Jersey) 50 Broadway. New York.
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DAYTON The entire village of Harshmanville was sold at auction. The land and property was appraised at more than $350,000, and consisted of 29 residences, the old Harshman homestead, a water power plant, and several manufacturing buildings.
CLEVELAND Frederick J. Fisher. , president of the Fisher Body Corporation of Detroit, has announced that a plant will be erected here for the man- i ufacture of automobile bodies. The j
plant will employ 7,000 men, he said.
EAST LIVERPOOL Rudolph Thompson, 35 years old, is recovering : from a wound in the head and 6houl-! der, sustained when he was accidental- j ly shot by J. H. Simms, while hunt- , ing near here.
HAMILTON The Rotary club has announced that it will assist in the selection of trees to be planted in
Hamilton as memorials to soldiers in
the war. The plan is to plant a tree for every man from Butler county.
AVIATOR KILLED BY FALL
MEDFORD, Ore., Oct. 8. A forest fire patrol airplane fell near Gold Ray shortly before noon Tuesday. One aviator was killed, and the other seriously injured. The engine stopped, according to observers, and while circling for a landing the plane suddenly went into a tail spin, crashing to earth.
MORE Kellogg's is eaten today than ever before. Why? Millions of people won't have any other than Kellogg's Toasted
Corn Flakes, because they know its unvarying quality and they are delighted with its inimitable flavor oven - fresh in our waxtite package. Every grocer everywhere sells Kellogg's everyday.
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"I Am Luck"Luck the gift cf the fairy wand! If it came to choosing between beauty and brains and a million dollars in the bank, or Luck just plain Luck what mother wouldn't choose Luck. Luck is another word for Health the kind of abounding health that never knows when it's down, but only comes back with a bigger wallop. That's the kind of Health a diet of Good Luck Bread is going to build for your boys and girls if you give it half a chance by having them eat more, much more of it. A whole loaf per day for each member of your family is not too much, if you really want to build the kind of health that brings Luck. Krug's Bread BUTTER NUT OR HOLSUM is Best of all Breads, just as Bread is Best of all Foods. It brings good luck to every home it enters.
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AMERICA'S HOME SHOEIPQUSH
AA. WAYS 10c SAME QUALITY SAME 3JAME F'RICC
Learn Thrift! Yrni can shine your shoes 50 times with a box of SttnuxA. 50 shines would cost you $5.00 or more. Well shined shoes add to your personal appearance. fviiwxA maJkes shoes weaa: longer as the wax and oil protect the surface, keep tne leather suit and plidble. It pays tn give your shoes good care when they cost so much. 4T A
OHSKOli HOME SET Makes Home Shoe Shining
easy and convenient. BLACK TAN WHITE OX-BLOOD BROWN
Administrator's Sale of Real Estate Friday, October 10, 1919 At 2 o'clock p. m. on the Premises The two following properties in the order listed below: No. 313 South 9th Street Consisting of a two-story frame dwelling of 7 rooms, supplied with gas and city water. No. 315 South 9th Street Consisting of a two-story frame house of 6 rooms, supplied with gas and city water. These properties are in a good residence section of the city, on an improved street. TERMS OF SALE One-third cash in hand ; balance in two equal installments in 0 and 18 months; notes to bear 6 interest, secured by mortgage on real estate sold or purchaser may pay all cash. For further information see Dickinson Trust Company Ext'r. Est. of Caroline Hofheinz
Get What You Want
Whether you are looking for an apartment, a house, or a cozy bungalow, the very thing you seek is waiting for you now. Where? Right here in THE PALLADIUM, of course. All the leading real estate men of Richmond and vicinity "show their goods" in Richmond's great home paper. The greatest variety of real estate is listed in THE PALLADIUM. The most attractive values are offered here. Whatever you want, you're sure to find it if you look for it in The Palladium "The Newspaper Everybody Reads"
PALLADIUM WANT ADS BRING RESULTS - TRY THEM
