Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 309, 28 December 1922 — Page 5
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND., THURSDAY, DEC. 28, 1922
PAGE FIVE
Chapters From a Woman's Life By Jane Phelps
ANOTHER HONEYMOON , Chapter 34 Seated In the roadster beside Walter, ekimming swiftly over the country Toads, 1 forgot there was anything unpleasant in the world. I was tired and the bracing air rested me. We talked little, but once in a while Walter would turn to me an in a funny little way he would say: , "Hello. Doreen ," then pay attention to his driving. Sometimes he would vary it by asking: , "Having a good time, Doreen?" Not waiting for an answer. These little lovable traits in Walter always made me love him more. He gemed so like great big Irresponsible boy. We stopped at a famous restaurant for our dinner. Henri knew us and expressed his pleasure at seeing me,
saying something complimentary, so
tickling Walter's vanity easily aroused. We had a wonderful dinner it was
horribly expensive, but I made no ob
jections and lingering long over our cheese and coffee, chatting. Walter talked a little of the party. Said Grace had "knocked them all out" tn my costume, but carried the idea that it was because of my selection, not her beauty. "She told me you wanted to sketch her in it." I said. . "Yes,, she's coming tomorrow. Better run in and have tea. She made Helen look like 30 cents in her cheap get up. She's raving over it. Women certainly are cattish." "Me too?" I asked, happy that he had proposed I come to tea. "Xo Doreen, I think you have less of that in you than any woman I ever knew. It makes you mighty attractive, too." Is it any wonder I was happy? Suddenly I burst out: "I'd rather have had this afternoon with you than gone to the party!" "Good girl!" he patted by hand as it lay on the table. "I guess we'd better be going," he
said after a bit. "The mater will won-
,1 .. 1 . 1 V- r ...
It was like a douche of cold water.
But I threw off the feeling and replied
gayly:
"I shall tell her that we have been
on another honeymoon." "We'll - have to have them often. Walter replied, as we-walked out fol lowed by the obsequious Henri.
The ride home in the early evening
was delightful. A great sense of peace and happiness stole over me. How
foolish I was to allow anything to wor
ry me, when I had by husband's love. I felt I did have it and my cheeks reddened in the darkness as I thought of my jealousy of Helen Ralstrom. Nothing mattered but his love for me, mine for him. , "I'll be right back as soon as I put the car up," he said as he helped me out. . Mrs. Page and Claire were sitting cozily in the living room. She had remained to dinner and they were evidently having a pleasant chat. . "How did you find Mrs. Eldredge?" I p.sked. "Not quite so well but cheerful as ever," Claire replied. "She was delighted that I brought Mrs. Page." "And I was charmed with ber," Walter's mother added. ." "I must tell you what Mrs. Page did. After we left she stopped at the fruit-
ery, and sent my Invalid a wonderful basket of fruit, jellies, etc. Then a great bunch of old-fashioned flowers.
I know she was delighted with such thoughtfulness. She is so grateful for
any kindness, the thought that prompts
it. That means more to her than the gift itself." "That is the way' with all of us I think." "Where did you and Walter go? Jennie said you went away together." "We went honeymooning!" I said just as Walter appeared. "That's right, Mater! And we're going often-" he said. Claire soon left, and before we retired Mrs. Page said: "My room looked very nicely, Doreen. Thank you for the flowers." I went to bed very happily.. Life wasn't so hard after all. Tomorrow Doreen Plans a Dinner for Mrs. Page
STUDY IN BLACK AND WHITE FOR MIDWINTER WEAR
Beauty Chats By Edna Kent Forbes
: 'NTY
Have Your 1923 Calendar at Hand to ' Greet the New Year
PREVENTING CHAPPED SKIN These are the days when a cold
cream jar is a woman's best friend.
Few -things so spoil one's good looks and good nature as a rough, red, prickly, dry, chapped complexion. No one .need have it who takes the very slightest care of herself.
The first thing to remember is that
in really cold weather the ordinary inexpensive cold cream is not good
enough. These creams, like my own cleansing cream, are made from white mineral oil, which the skin will not readily absorb. To be sure, such creams will help a little in preventing or curing chap but try this instead: . Fine Cream Almond oil (or olive oil). 4 ounces Spermaceti 1 ounce White wax 1 ounce Rose water 4 ounces Benzoin 1 drachm Make up as usual, melting the oil and the wax and spermaceti, adding the warmed rose water and benzoin
and beating uhtil ready to congeal. This forms a stiff cream and goes on best after the face is washed with hot water. Wipe off what's left on the skin with a cloth wrung from hot water, powder and you can face the keenest wind unhurt. This is good for the hands, if used after they've been washed and if loose
gloves are pulled on and kept on for some hours. It's a splendid nourishing cream and I also advise it usually for massaging wrinkles. But any cream is awkward on the hands during the day. The Hpney-Almond Lotion is best for that purpose as it evaporates so rapidly and leaves the skin soft and white. Have you my formula for it also? If not, write for it, not failing to enclose your s. a. e.
W I :3 j f ?&4 SiL fit W
If you want a free calendar before January 1st, place your order today. Do not suffer the inconvenience of being without a calendar even for a few days. The Washington Information Bureau of The Palladium has one .waiting for you. It is artistic, handy, and in every way stisfactory.
Send for your copy today. Fill outj and mail the coupon below, enclosing ; two cents in stamps for return post-j
age. Write your name ana aaares3
clearly. (Xa not send the coupon to The Palladium. Mail it direct to Washington. D. C.) I Information Bureau, I ! Washington, D. C. I : Frederick J. Haskin, Director. : t THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM '. I enclose herewith two cents i in stamps for return postage on I a free copy of the 1923 Caled- j dar.
Official Photographer On Sheriff's Staff (By United Press) CLEVELAND, Ohio, Dec. 28 An official photographer may be added to the . staff of Sheriff of Charles B. Stannard of Cuyahoga county. The photographer will accompany the sheriff or assistant prosecutors when
they go out on murder cases. The addition of the photographer, county officials believe, will aid in detecting criminals.. Stannard contends that If the bodies of the Rev. Edward W. Hall and Mrs. Eleanor Mills had been photographed when they were found including the murder scene authori ties might have made some headway in solving the mystery.
CONSIDER REDECORATION OF FAYETTE COURTHOUSE CONNERSVILLE. Ind., Dec. 28 Re'decoration and repairing of the courthouse, requiring an expenditure of $5,000, and the employment of. a tax ferret to find property subject to taxation which has not been listed, were matters considered by the county council at its last meeting, Wednesday. . - . .
j Name , Street ! City .. State
Heart Problems
Mrs. T. W. S. Ingrowing nails should be trimmed so the center of the nail is shorter than at the sides. The sides of the nails are then lifted very gently from the fleshly part of the toe and a very small piecp of absorbent cotton is placed under these. This will keep the nail from continuing the pressure under the flesh and will almost always correct this bad tendency.
Velvet and ermine are regally combined in this outfit designed for midwinter wear. The black velvet gown is a gracefully draped model trimmed with snowy white ermine collar and cuffs. The hat is also black velvet, ermine trimmed.
and keep back this growth of dead cuticle you can not fail to improve your nails, in addition to giving you so much more comfort in the use of your hands in your work.
All Inquiries addressed to Miss Forbej In care of the "Beauty Chats" department will be answered in these columns In their turn. This requires considerable time, however, owing to the great number received. So if a personal or quicker reply is desired, a stampea and self-addressed envelope must be enclosed with th"- ".i?;ttott.- The Kdi'.or.
Dear Mrs. Thompson: ' Do good lookinz girls always win fellows?
There is a girl I know whom I liked very much, but, she vamped my friend. She said she could win him because she was better looking than I. She has been married once and has two children and. is keeping company with a fellow out of town. Yet she tried to take my friend. I told her she could have him and she took him. I would not quarrel over a fellow, but don't think she had done right or he either. Am I doing right by not quarreling with her? LONELY DOT. Perhaps good-looking girls have some advantage over the others, but charm and good personality mean more than a pretty face. The thing the young woman did was selfish and unkind. It shows you she is not your friend. I agree with you that there is no use in quarreling because if the
young man cared more for her than for
you you should be glad to have him go. Naturally he would give you up when he felt he liked some one else better, just as you would have given him up if some one' had come into your life for whom you care more. Let this experience be a thing of the past and let your interest be in the present and future blessings which come to you daily.
Esther M. A. It Is foolish to think that you can not improve the condition of your nails. If you neglect to keep the cuticle from growing over them and never use any oil on them, they will be filled with these ridges and
probably grow worse. Such ridges are
usually caused from a dry skin and
when the skin that grows over them is allowed to increase it impedes the cir
culation. Nails neglected to the extent yours are can not be otherwise but brittle and full of ridges. If you will rub some oil or a cream into them each night
BILIOUSNESS SICK HEADACHE, call for an f& Tablet. ( yegetabto aperient) to tone and strengthen tha organs of digestion and elimt nation. Improves Appetite, Relieves Constipation,
Get I! Used fir over
Zb'DOX
Tour
Draqtp
Chips off -the Old Block
N? JUNIORS Little ffis One-third the regular dose. Made of same ingredients, then candy
r or children and adults.
coated.
TROVBI.KU "WITH WE A K KIDNEYS "Have been troubled with weak kidneys since childhood." writes Mrs. G. Hyde, Benzonia, Michigan. "Now past forty and have had terrible backache and that tired out feeling, hardly able to do my work. Ry using Folev Kidnev Pills accompanied with Foley Cathartic Tablets I soon felt like a new person " Backache, rheumatic pains, dizziness and blurred vision are svmptoms of kidney trouble. Foley Kidnev Pills give quick relief. A. G. Lmken Drug Co., 62-6-Main St. Advertisement.
COASTING MADE" SAFE TERKE HAUTE, Dec. 28. Coasting was made safe for the kids in Terre Haute for the entire winter when Mayor Davis ordered Fourth and Sixth
streets south of Putnam street closed for the season. In the past, the joy
of the youngsters ' in coasting down
these long, steep streets was marred
by the possibility of collision with an
east or westbound vehicle.
LDr. BELLS
iPin&Tar Honey
ana I:
Breaks Coughs ad Colds
People everywhere are finding relief for coughs and colds in this dependable proscription of an old family phvalclan. Dr. BeU'a la een Jrup of . pine-tar honey. It etopa coogha. looaena clinging phlegm and aoothea Inflamed tisvnesof tbethroat. Its efficaer.pleaaant taate and pure Ingredienta make it an ideal ayrnp for children aa well aa adult. Yonr druggist haa it.
Buy Furniture With Your Christmas Money FERD GROTHAUS Furniture of Quality 614-616 Main St.
A. G. Luken Drug Co.
" r
PHOTOS
722 MAIM ST RICHMONd IN&
FRIDAY SPECIAL
Parker House Rolls per doz .
NEW SYSTEM BAKERY 913 Main St.
10c
Blankets and Comforts WELDON'S Formerly Reed Furniture Co. Cor. 10th and Main
Classified Adages
GREAT w.eight may hang upon small wires. And big savings onlittle lines in the A-B-C Classified Section.
Read Them TorJay!
Try These New Gennett Records (Released this week) on that new Phonograph. (Gennett Records Play on All Phonographs) 5003 Irish Polka 75c Medley of Irish Reels Played, by Tom, Ennis ' and John Garridy. Bagpipes and Violin with Piano accompaniment. 5008 Ua Like No A Like (My Heart's. Desire) 75c Sweet Lu Lehna. (The Scarlet Scented Flower) Sung by Prince Lei Laui. GEXXETT RECORDS are growing In favor with phonograph owners because they give more ' pleasing results. We invite you to come in and hear 1,he latest "Hits" and the standard selections. You will appreciate the difference in the tone qualities. The Starr Piano Co. 931 Main Street.
SLUSH! SLUSH!
Ducks, Geese, Turkeys and Chickens For Your New Year's Dinner Place your order early if you want a nice Turkey for New Year's-
Don't go around with your wet feet, making a noise like a hydraulic pump; of course it isn't the noise that hurts, but it causes many a doctor bill.
Yes, and cheap grade.
rubbers are just as bad Our rubbers are not cheap in quality in price only. You all know that Hood Rub- ' bers are best. Just see how much lower our prices are. The Home of "Arrow" Rubbers
The
loosier
itore
Cor. 6th and Main Sts.
3h33S.6 Phone 57?J
"Weekly
J5y Om er- (tlMe&.n
77ie Feed Man ;
VOL II.
Registered RICHMOND. INDIANA, DECEMBER 28, 1922
No. 36
Farming as a Business The Farm Journal . Henry C. Wallace, of Washington and Des Moines, was once an editor of a farm paper, and the editorial habit of hitting the nail squarely on the head still sticks to him. Here is what Secretary Wallace said the other day to some Ohio people: "The farmer is the only large producer who produces without informing himself carefully as to future demand; who sells at the price the buyer is willing to pay; who does not condition his products for market; who dumps them in huge quantities soon after produced; and who, therefore, pays high charges of all sorts to other people to do what he ought to do for himself." There it is, and every word of it gospel truth. Judged as a business by the standards of other kinds of business, farming is an occupation in which no one but a lunatic would engage. Hard work, honesty and good judgment will run any other business profitably, but the farmer can use all these and still go broke just the same, except when a succession of lucky
chances, pure accidents, as it were, turn his losses into a profit. On the whole, farming prospers. Not much, as Mr. Dooley says, but some. How much more it would prosper, and how much better it would be for the country, if that prosperity were the sure reward for those who deserve it, instead of a , favor handed out blindly by a blind fortune.
Daily Live Stock Markets CALL WHELAN
MORE CREAM?
The Enquirer yesterday carried the following paragraph: "Cream shipments are on the increase as the cold weather continues, and farmers are getting results from housing and feeding their stock on a balanced ration."
As a general rule, when pasture is abundant and the weather is warm, the ordinary farmer lets his cows alone. . Then, too, be is too busy with his other work to spend much time milking. Corn is now out of the fields and there is not much to do except feed and milk. The extra minutes spent in proper feeding will bring in larger cream, checks and help increase the already too limited winter income. Plenty of spare time in the winter should afford any live stock owner opportunity to study the needs of his stock. Stock journals, experiment- station bulletins and newspapers are all at his disposal. All of these contain . valuable information. But even this is not
really necessary. Some time when in town drop in at Whelan's Feed Store and talk over your problems. Whelan makes a real dairy feed one which produces the best results and is very inexpensive. Take a sack of . Whelan's Wonder Feed home ' and t try it. You'll be back for more;", others have. It costs but ?1.85 for a hundred lbs.
Those Fattening Pigs Our attention has been called several times recently to the fact that a good many fattening hogs have ceased to "do well." Investigation of these cases shows that the hogs have bem getting corn
for breakfast, corn for sunner.
corn for breakfast and supper again the next day, and so on. Sometime ago we issued a warning against a continuous straight corn diet, advising the use of tankage and middlings as a part of the ration. For hogs "off their feed" from this cause we recommend the use of Whelan's Balanced Hog Ration. We have never known of pigs "backing up" on this feed. Tt is a combination of muscle, fat and bone-building feeds. It keeps the pigs healthy, gives them keen appetites, and. along with corn, it makes a good "finish." Other feeders have met with suc,cpss in using this ration. There is no reason why your pigs will not respond as well as the other fellow's. Try it and be convinced. Only $2.35 per cwt.
LAST CHANCE SALE Kansas Flour, 24-Ib. sack 98c Narcissus Bulbs, 35c doz. 3 for Sl.OO Every housewife would be pleased with either or both. OMER G. WHELAN 31-33 S. 6th St.
A Common-Sense Feed at a Common-Cents Price Whelan's Balanced Hog Ration The hogs like it, and you will be pleased with the results; others are. , . $2.35 per hundred
Start the New Year Right by Using
"So FarS if Ahead It'a
- Whelan's Products Buhr Ground Corn Meal, yellow or white: Graham Flour, Whole Wheat Rlour, Pure Buckwheat Flour and .. the best you ever tasted Pan Cake Flours. Made Fresh Daily OMER G. WHELAN The Feed Man
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DAIRY FEEDS j Spend a few dollars and a few minutes' time for your cows. I Then wait a few days and collect a few more dollars for your i cream and milk. 1 WHELAN'S WONDER FEED will help your cows and they will help you. 1 Only S1.85 hundred - - COTTON SEED MEAL, per hundred S3.15 I OIL MEAL, per hundred S3.1o I' BRAN, per hundred SI. 75 - MALOSSES by barrel, pert gallon 20 I
OMER G. WHELAN The Feed Man
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If you are a baker or a housewife you want flour that has: Protein of proper quality and quantity Uniformity Whiteness If you are a dealer you want to carry flour that has: Quality and Popularity In either or any event then you should buy and use Washburn-Crosby Co.'s Gold Medal Flour
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Why Not Now?
aduaaa aV?nTjTft!T?Ya I j Li . -i liii. arwaai Tamil I n T i rimm mi K una-mnim lrl
OMER G. WHELAN Distributor
(Copyright 1912)
