Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 45, Number 67, 29 January 1920 — Page 5
THE K1CHM0ND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, THURSDAY, JAN. 29, 1920.
PAGE FIVE
Heart and Beauty Problems By Mrs. K!lzabeth Thompson
In answer to the letter signed "A Thoughtful Reader" I must admit that I am not an authority on drugs, patent medicines or such. If you want reliable and first hand information I would advise you to talk to a druggist. (2) I don't think you made such a terrible breach of etiquette by inviting the friend before you had called. It of course was proper to call upon her first. If of course you were unp.ble to do so, and wished to have her at your party, I think you would be committing no great breach. Dear Mrs. Thompson: Would you kindly tell me of a cure for a red nose? Cold cream of all sorts seem to have no effect whatever. Also tell me a remedy for bunions, as theyare very painful at times. Grateful. Poor circulation often times causes a red nose and ' there are also many conditions of your stomach or other organs which might make the nose red. I do not think cold creams will uo any good. I would advise you to watch your diet very carefully, get plenty of exercise and fresh air. If
the condition gets no better you might consult a physician and get a sure remedy. Bunicn pads to protect the shoe from rubbing the bunion are quite a help. There are also bunion plasters which are helpful, but the best method that I know of is to go to a chiropodist and have your feet treated. Dear Mrs. Thompson: My girl friend and I were invited to a party the ether night and upon leaving my girl friend kissed her fellow good, night, but I did not think this was proper. Please give me your opinion on this. We are both 14 years of age. Is it proper for a girl of 20 to allow a boy to put his arm around her? Blonde and Brunette. You girls are entirely too young to be going out with boys in the evening, and of course very much too young to allow the boys to kiss you. I can see no reason why a girl of 20 should especially want the boy to put hi3 arm around her. If he dors nothing more than that, however, I don't think there is anything improper or harmful to it.
She Married an Average Man
BT ZOE BECKLBY
No sooner was ray resolution taken to write - immediately to Jim that I felt like a different woman. A great burden seemed lifted from my heart The cheap remembrance of my escapade with Lynch and Waylan last night faded. A little dream of homes and gardens and my husband's companionship took Its place. ' Ye gods, how a woman craves to be loved! How we tumble about from
one environment to another, from one activity to another, from one experience to another always searching for ihe love that will satisfy us and be our ideal! We bump our heads and hearts. We fall down. We pick ourselves up ajrain, and go on. We weep and we laugh. We try to think things out. We get lonely and rush to people. We get sick of people and seek solitude. Is there any love, anywhere that satisfies? And how, HOW does one tind it? "By giving it!" whispers my good ang?l. "No woman who does hot know how to give up her own wishes can find love, for usefulness is love's great test. No woman who cannot be patient, forgiving, bigminded, self- controlled, can have the love that lasts ajjYand satisfies. The oldest truth in the world is that love begets love." Suddenly a vision of Jim the old Jim, the Jim I married rose before me, and with a feeling of infinite tenderness I sat down and wrote this letter: "Jim, my dearest: With a new, clear understanding. I see how stupidly wrong I have been. I come to you as a small chi!J steals up to a grown person toward whom it has shown wicked temper and disobedience. I ask you to forgive me, Jim. "I realize you owe no forgiveness. Yet you are a big enough man to know that forgiving is after all a privilege, and a proof of strength and of right. Yes, you are in the right. I am wrong. "But my blindness has passed. Call it hysteria illness lunacy anything you like. I see now what the worth55 while things are and what are valueless. The things you offer me home, protection, love (I hope I still have your love, Jim) are what I long for. The things I yearned to taste aro as dust in my mouth. "Forgive me, dear, and let's be happy! We who have once belonged, can surely renew the ties that bound us iirst iu mutual love. I know now that bonds can be sweet when they are bonds of understanding, of a mutual sweet ambition to make a home, per
haps to hear little voices and tiny leeti
pattering "They say a person cannot learn a great lesson in an instant. But I iinci it doesn't take long to learn mortal hunger. I am starving, Jim, for the wholesome lood of life! I want to come and be a real wife, make a real home for you. "I am to weary of trying to bo strong and independent I am weak; I don't WANT to be independent. I want to be taken care of like a poor kiddie who lias been lost and miserable and alomj and frightened. I want to be comforted and forgiven and told 'not to mind; that it's 'ill right now.' "I am just realizing what a precious thing I have nearly thrown away. Love and marriage are much to a m;tu. But they are infinitely more to a woman. "I s e women on the elreet, in the
STOMACH ULCER GONE SUFFERED 1 6 YEARS Says his stomach is perfect now, and his weight has increased. "T had ukers of the stomach so bad that I was ?nt to the hospital. Treatment there finally ffot me un my feet, but in a few days I was down again. "You saul you wouldn't guarantee Milks Kmulsion to cure a hail ease of tiieers of the stomach, but I tried it anyway. If it does the work for others as It did for me, you oug-ht not to be backward about any case of stomach ulcers. I have now taken twelve bottles and mv stomach is in perfect condition T feel better and weiarh more than T have for 1 1" years, and I have hail stomach trouble all of that time." j, s. Walker. Greenleaf, Kan. Thousands of people who have suTfpred a sron v from chronic stomach trou
ble in its worst forms, have been
resioreu 10
n. A noth-
shops, in offices, in this very house, in whose eyes I read a consuming desire to 'belong. "Some of them are so starved for love and comradeship that they make terrible sacrifices for even a cheap counterfeit! Yet here am I, throwing the great gifts away. And for WHAT? A will o the wisp, an Imaginary glory which I call independence, Jim! Let me conn; to you quickly ANN." I sealed the letter, addressed and stamoed it, and breathed a deep sigh of relief. My heart was lightened, my soul poured out. Then I tore the thing in two In four and scattered the bits in the waste basket. (To be continued)
customary to give the narte of Marie to girls, adding a middle name to qualify the attributes of the first Mary, the Blessed Virgin herself. In this way, several daughters of a family could be called by the name of Marie or Maria and yet they could be- distinguished by their second appelationThe earliest of these .names was that of Maria Annunziata, very popular in Spain, and later changed to Maria Annonciada. In France, one of the most popular feminine names was Marie Annonciade; another was Marie Assunta. France also had Marie des Anges (Marie of the angels) and in Spain, the votaress of the merciful in terceding patroness (the Blessed Virgin) is Maria de Mercedes. Marie de Dolores (Marie of Sorrows) and Marie del Incarnacion aro other examples of the popular trend which helped to spread the name of Marie. Many young ladies in Spain are still christened Maria de la Concepcion, but ia Italy, this is contracted to the one word Concetta. England and America use' Marie along and also favor Molly, the diminutive and endearment. Indeed, in England, Molly is frequently given in baptism as a proper name with no reference to its more dignified parent. Marie's talismanlc stone is jasper.
! the deep green gem which is proof
against evil spirits and bites of venomous creatures. If placed upon a snake bite, it is said to draw the poison from the wound. It will also bring rain if prayers are made while wearing the stono. Friday is Marie's lucky day and 1 her lucky number.
AMERICANS BUY' HUNGARIAN CASTLES AS AN INVESTMENT BUDAPEST, Jan. 29. Hungarian palaces and estate which before the war were valued at from $100,000 to 5200,000 are being purchased by Americans, Englishmen and Frenchmen for
comparatively insignificant sums. In
isome cases magnificent properties
have brought only from $5,000 to $10,000. Dollars are now quoted at from 20 to 50 times their pre-war value, and tose who have sold their property believe the exchange situation will be adjusted in a 6hort time and that they will profit handsomely from the deals they have made.
WOULD BAR IMMORAL FILMS. , WASHINGTON. Jan. 29. Immoral motion picture films would be barred from transportation in Interstate commerce under a bill passed Wednesday by .the house and sent to the senate.
The first daily paper In the world was published at Frankfort, Germany.
U
What'
s in a
Name?"
Fcts about your name: Its history: ltn meaning; whence It was derived; its significance; your lucky day and lucky -jewel. BY MILDRED MARSHALL
(Ccpyright, 1919, by The Wheeler Synd!?:atP. Inc.) MARIE Marie is perhaps the most prevalent feminine name known to etymologists Its synonym, Mary, has almost equal vogue, -and Maria, its other equivalent, is enormously popular. But though Marie is originally the French version of the name of the Blessed Virgin, all countries have adopted her and called her their own. Originally, of course, the Hebrew word, marah, meaning bitter, is the root from which all derivatives of Mary are evolved. Quite early in historv. it became
Health Boards Give Warning of Influenza Danger
Ask People to Be Careful and Take Proper Treatment Promptly. Many Pneumonia Cases Follow Influenza. What to Do.
ble in Its worst ,i m, napromptly relieved and soon restorei perfect health b Milks Kmulsion. trial will sho?T and a trial costs n
Milks Emulsion is a pleasant, nutritive food and a corrective medicine. It restores healthy.- natural bowel action, doing away with all need of pills and physics. it promotes appetite and quicklv puts the . digestive, organs in shape to assimilate food. As a builder of flesh and strength. Milks Kmulsion Is strongly recommended to those whom sickness has weakened, and is a powerful aid In resisting and repairing the effects of wasting diseases. Chronic stomach trouble and constipation are promptly relieved usually in one day. This is the only solid emulsion made, and so palatable that it Is eaten with & ppoon like ice cream. tc matter how severe your case, you
re urged to try Milks Emulsion under
this guarantee luive su uuuno uumc with you, use it according to direcn rrl tf not satisfied with the re
sults, vour money will be promptly re-! funded. Price 60c and $1.20 per bottle.j The Milks Kmulsion Co.. Terre Haute. Ind. Sold by druggists everywhere.
To be prepared for the serious outbreaks of influenza and Pneumonia that are now sweeping over the entire country and that have Seized on this community Public Health Boards everywhere are issuing caution and instructions to the public not to neglect treatment at the first symptom of a cold and to- cooperate with the board and physicians in stamping out the spread of the disease. N'o disease developes so quickly or spreads so rapidly. The first symptom usually ia a sharp rise in temperature; to 10o or 104 degrees, headache, pain in the back, throat feeling dry or sore. Unless promptly chocked by proper treatment, the best plan is to go to bed and stay there for at least a week, keeping warm to avoid pneumonia and let the minor ailment run its course and also prevent the spread of the disease to others. Most of us. in these busy days, cannot afford. If it can be avoided, to lose a week or more of work so it is all. the more necessary that at the very first sign of grip or Influenza a counter- acting treatment should be taken. Probably no better or more effective treatment could be followed at such a time than to get from the nearest drug store a complete Hyomei outfit consisting of a bottle of the pure Oil of Hyomei and a little vest pocket, hard rubber inhaling device into which a few drops of the oil are poured. Put the inhaler in your mouth and breath its air deep into the passages of your nose, throat and lungs. Every par tide of air that enters your breathing organs will thus be charged with an antiseptic germ-killing balsam that will destroy the germs that have found lodgment there. You can't do this too often. The Hyomei Inhaler is small and can be conveniently carried In a handbag or in your vest-pocket. Kvery halt' hour or so throughout the day take it out and draw a few breaths of its pure healing air into your nose and throat. lLclief comes almost Instantly. . Throat conditions become normal and you soon are feeling fine. This outfit is not at all expensive for the rubber inhaler will last a lifetime while the Oil of Hyomei can be obtained at little cost from any reliable druggist. Iots of people already have a Hyomei Inhaler. Take it out, charge it and use it without delay. If you haven't one get It today. A few cents spent now may easily prevent serious illness and save you many dollars and help stamp out the tpread of the disease. Adv.
IdV.
TUESDAY Afternoon and Night THURSDAY Afternoon and Night SATURDAY Morning, Afternoon and Night
COLISEUM
To Relieve Catarrhal Deafness and Head Noises
If you have Catarrhal Deafness or are hard of hearing or have head noises go to your druggist and get 1 ounce of Parmint (double strength), and add to it pint of hot water and a little granulated sugar. Take one tablespoonful four times a day. This will often bring quick relief from the distressing head uotsea. Clogged nostrils should open, breathing become easy and the mucus stop d roping into the throat. It is -easy to prepare, costs little and is pleasant to take. Anyone who has Catarrhal Deafness or head noises should give this prescription a trial. Adv.
A Real Remedy For Falling Hair Keeps Scalp Clean and Healthy Prevents Dandruff. When your hair becomes faded, dry, streaked and scraggly, when it falls out badly and new hair cannot grow the roots should be immediately vitalized and properly, nourished. To do this quickly, safely and at little expense, get from your druggist some Parisian sage (liquid form) and apply as directed. Parisian sage is guaranteed to abolish all dandruff stop scalp itch and falling hair and promote a new growth or money refunded. It's In great demand by discriminating women because it makes the hair so soft, lustrous, easy to arrange attractively and appear much heavier than it really is. A massage with Parisian sage is a real delight easy to use, not sticky or greasy, and delicately perfumed an antiseptic liquid free from all dangerous ingredients. If you want good looking hair and plenty of it by all means use Parisian sage a little attention now helps insure beautiful hair for years to come. Adv.
ANNOUNCEMENT
In following out our policy to always give oar patrons the most courteous and efficient service, we have placed oar Player Roll and Gennett Record Departments under the direction of Miss Mabel Steinkamp. You will find it a real pleasure to come in and have demonstrated the records and rolls you are interested in. We extend to you a special invitation to visit these departments.
The Starr Piano Co. 931-35 Main St.
QQ0fl
903 Main
Fetor's Style Stoop
903 Main POO O
O
Sank
o
o
Ctaie ol (Dim slip
$20,000 Worth of New Apparel to Be Sold for $89000 Sale Starts Tomorrow at 9 A. M. David IW. Fchr for the Past Seven Months Manager of The Fashion Shop Bought The Style Shop at 903 Main and Will Close Out Entire Stock at Great Sacrifices Having been identified in business here for the past 7 months, I decided to locate permanently. I purchased the Style Shop at 903 Main Street, which only opened 6 months ago, and known to carry one of the finest assortments of Women's Wear in Richmond: I must remodel this store to get ready for Spring business and will close out every dollar's worth of this high class Ladies Apparel in a SENSATIONAL PRICE CUTTING SALE that has never had an equal in the history of Richmond. This stock was bought at a great Sacrifice and must be cleaned up in a short, snappy Carnival of Bargains, that will bring hosts of women to it daily all new goods including some of Advance Spring Creations all will be sacrificed. Only a few prices are quoted below, but we positively guarantee this event to undersell any similar event held here. COME EARLY, BUY, SAVE. THE BIGGER YOUR PURCHASE, THE GREATER YOUR SAVING.
M
3E
3
TO SACRIFICE
250 SUITS
To close out our Suits quickly, we offer all Wool Tricotines, Men's Wear Serge and Wool Poplins in all sizes, at but a fraction of their actual value. Many of this season's best styles to select from.
CHOICE OF ALL OU& NEW $25, $27.50 AND $30 SUITS AT
CHOICE OF ANY SUIT WORTH $35, $37.50 AND UP TO $40 AT...
WE POSITIVELY GUARANTEE EVERY ARTICLE SOLD AND WILL REFUND YOUR MONEY ON ANY PURCHASE THAT IS NOT EXACTLY AS REPRESENTED
300 NEW
an
WOMEN'S AND MISSES'
Full length Coats and Coatees of Silk, Plush, Silvertone, Velours, etc. Plain and fur trimmed. Representing every desirable, and dependable material of this season.
COATS FORMERLY SELLING AT $18, $20, $22.50 and $25, NOW
CHOICE OF ANY COAT THAT SOLD AT $27.50, $30 and $35, NOW
CHOICE OF ANY
$45.00, $50.00 and $60.00 SUIT at
RICHMOND'S GREATEST
ASSORTMENT of SILK AND
WOOL
Fancy WaistisU
Choice of all Crepe de Chine and Georgette WAISTS, sold up to $10.00, at. . .
Choice of all Crepe de Chine and Georgette Waists, sold up to $15.00, at
ALTERATIONS FREE
E
SAW I $11
A
ALL
Worth $40,00, $45 and $50.00, goat
COATS
7S
Dresses, of Poilette, Tricotine, Serge, Georgette and Taffetta, etc., for street or afternoon wear, at prices that will not cover the cost of material. Be early while assortment is fresh and complete. Many are suitable for spring wear.
$12.00, $15.00, $18.00 DRESSES
WASH Waists
AT
$20.00. $25.00, $27.50 DRESSES
$30.00, $35.00, $37.50 VALUES
SHyMsh Skirts
o1
j Choice of all Satin
Plaids and Serge Skirths worth up to $15.00 at....
$ii
$ii
Choice of all Silk and Taffeta Skirts sold up to $10.00 at
$40.00, $45.00, $50.00 DRESSES
MISSES' FURS
50 Sets of MISSES and CHILDREN'S FUR SETS, sold for $10.00 at
iOoOOOOO
1
Don't Forget the Name and Place "EMM'S STYLE SHOP
903 IVf AIIM
903 IVIAIIM
ALTERATIONS FREE
oooooooi
