Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 40, Number 202, 6 August 1915 — Page 12

PAGE TWELVE

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, FRIDAY. AUGUST 6, 1915

SOLDIERS OF BELGIUM ENJOY PLAYING GAMES

Frenchman Describes King

Albert's Warriors as ChildLike Soldiers in j- Deport

ment and Actions.

Play Games like . Boys and Fuss Over Toys in Hospit

als Like Youngsters in Kindergarten. BY GEORGES DUFRESNE. PARIS, August 6. Nothing strikes one so much when living among Belgian soldiers, as the accuracy of the phrase, which Invariably recurs in every conversation about them "They are like children." They are indeed like children. I have never seen grown men in masses so easily amused. This is perhaps fortunate, for they have only too little to amuse them in the fragment which remains of their country. They consist, of course, largely of simple-minded peasants, innocent of any but the most rudimentary book-learning and of the imagination which book-learning develops. When, here and there along the coast, they bathe, they play in the water like boys of 11 or 12, splashing one another, and dancing round and round in rings. I have seen hundreds of them roaring with laughter for an hour at the antics of one, who, stripped to the waist on the top of a tramcar, pretended to swallow empty sardine tins. 8oldiers Like Games. They love football, but they have not enough footballs. They are fond of music though if they have an ear they must often long to kill some of their buglers but they seem to be very short of their national domestic instrument, the accordlan. One, who used to play in Piccadlly -restaurants, takes his violin with him to the trenches. But for the most part there is a great lack, which I venture to

suggest that well-to-do Belgians in England might easily fill of the means of making a cheerful and harmonious noise. Their child-like nature comes out very notlcably among the convalescent wounded. In one "ambulance" I found the most popular toy to be one of those dolls with a musical box under her skirts which one twirls round on the end of a stick. Similarly, among those just beginning to walk again, there was great competition for a child's musical wheel-barrow, which played as one trundled it. I need hardly say that this "ambulance" was started, and is conducted by a lady. She understands children.

Many Belgian soldiers are resting before or after their ' labours at the front. They drill, of course, for several hours a day, but no attempt seems to be made to help them to organize their amusements, although every one knows how necessary It is, at a children's party, for the grown-ups to "give the thing a . start." To my mind what the Belgian army needs when it is resting is organized games, athletic competitions, and out-of-door lectures. I have heard of one officer who takes his men out and reads to them, and they love it. As for the khaki, the new uniform resembles the British in everything except that ill-fitting yellow gaiters are substituted for puttees. So far I have met no serious person who did not object to it. On the other hand patriots dislike a change which seems to leave an army which has fought gallantly for its country, without anything national about it. On the other hand, soldiers point out that, twenty yards away, it is now impossible to tell a well-et-up Belgian from an Englishman.

I

EATON, OHIO.

Mrs. Albert Hahn has returned from a visit with relatives in Indianapolis. Misses Leon Dlsher and Katherine Rice, of Lewlsburg, spent last week here with Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Green. Misses Olena and Alberta McCain of Indianapolis, are guests of Miss Martha Becker. Mrs. H. Z. Silver and daughter. Miss Helen, are visiting relatives at St. Paul, Minn. They will be gone two

weeks.

Mr. and Mrs. D. C. Hendricks have gone to San Francisco, to visit the exposition. Before returning to Eaton

they will visit relatives at ElPaso,

Texas, and Mindus, N. M.

Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Green returned to Eaton Tuesday, after a honeymoon

trip, which Included a visit to the ex

positions and other western coast points. After a short visit with his

parents, Mr. and Mrs. F. M. Green,

they went to New York to reside.

Miss Mabel Cox is visiting her uncle Everett Peftenberger, and family, in

Columbus.

Miss Luella Heman returned Tues

day from Peru, Indiana, where she was a guest of relatives and friends several weeks. Miss Myrna Frank, of Lewlsburg, was a guest of Rev. and Mrs. D. R. Wilson last week. Mrs. Merle Murphy and little son, of Wapakeneta, have been visiting her .grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Lew-ellen.

You Don't Mean To State That Women Smoke?

In 1913 there felled in Ireland.

were 574,859 trees

Will Make Family Ask Second Helping

BY DAINTY DOLLY. Want something new, something that you never knew how to cook before? Well here they are right fresh from the kitchen. Try them just once. First thing you know father and the boys will be asking you to make some more of that stuff we had the other day. When you ask them what it was and give it the name you will find out that it was one of these new dishes. Which shall we make today of the following flour: Chicken Broth With Rice. Select a soft-meated fowl (milk-fed, if possible) ; disjoint and prepare for stewing. Cover with sufficient water, bring tt the boil, and place in the fireless cooker for four hours or more, or simmer gently over a slow fire until tender, adding boiling water when necessary. Cook sufficient rice to thicken soup and for a pudding next day. Season the broth with salt, pepper and bay leaf. The pieces of chicken may be lifted, drained, floured, seasoned and fried in butter, a little broth being reserved to add to the browned butter for the gravy. Garnish with parsley or cress. Berry Tea Cake. One-fourth cup butter, one-third cup sugar, one egg, two and two-thirds cups flour, four teaspoonfuls salt, one cup milk, one cup berries. Cream the butter; add gradually sugar and egg well beaten; mix and sift the flour, baking powder and salt,

reserving three-eights cup of flour to be mixed with the berries and added last; add the remainder alternately with the milk. Bake in muffin tins in a moderate oven about twenty?five minutes. Gooseberry Tansy. Place some fresh butter In a frying pan; when it is melted put Into it a quart of ripe green gooseberries and fry until tender, breaking them to a mash. Beat well the yolks of five

eggs and the whites of three with

three-quarters of a pound of sugar,

three spoonfuls of sherry, the same of

cream, three sponge cakes grated, and three spoonfuls of flour. Mix all together, and then add the gooseberries

out of the pan, stirring all well. Di

vide Into small cakes and fry them in butter to a golden brown color. Screen

each with sugar. Egg Pie.

Butter a pudding dish and line it with fine bread crumbs seasoned with salt and pepper, cover these with a layer of skinned and sliced tomatoes, then a layer of mashed potaties. On this break four or five eggs, according to the size of the dish. Scatter chopped gherkins or capers lightly over the eggs, then another layer of bread

crumbs and another layer of toma

toes, and so on until the dish is full,

making the last layer of bread crumbs. Place a few pieces of butter on the top and bake for twenty minutes in a hot

oven.

Cigarette sales in Richmond would fall off to an alarming extent if the fair sex abandoned the use of the noxious weed, was the statements made by a number of dealers today. While it is not generally known, it la a fact that there are hundreds of women who are addicted to the" cigarette habit and while most of them buy the milder brands there are many who smoke the strongest kinds. Cork tips and the other fancy ones do not appeal especially to the women, only when they are first beginning the habit. After they have smoked a while they find some particular kind that appeals to their taste and unlike the men, they seldom change. If the dealer has not got their favorites they go elsewhere and get them. "It's funny to watch them," declared

one dealer, 'when they are beginners. They will wait for an opportunity when no one is around and then have them wrapped up in. paper. After they have bought a few packs they just come in like anybody else and usually buy a package of cigarettes and a box of matches. 'While it is the habit of many of the women to smoke and it is not an uncommon thing in the larger cities to see women smoking in cafes and other places, there is no doubt that the habit is spreading rapidly among the gentler sex and it may be that the day is not far distant when we will see the ladies walking along the street puffing away as unconcernedly as any man.' TEACHERS CHOSEN EATON, O., Aug. 6. Prof. W. T. Pheanis has been re-employed principal of the school at West Elkton for the coming year. Other teachers employed follow: Miss Katherine Drake, of Lebanon, eight grade; Miss Selma Roberts, sixth and seventh grades; Miss Tracy Campbell, of West Alexandria, fourth and fifth grades; Miss Irma Fudge of Oxford, first, second and third grades.

DAND ANNOUNCES CONCERT NUMBERS

Below is given the program for the concert at Glen Miller park Sunday, August 10, by the Richmond Concert Band: Part 1. 1. March, "North Wind" Chambers. 2. Overture, "Orphens" Offenbach. 3. Characteristic novelty, "Teddy Bear Picnic" Bratton. 4. Song Hits Lampe. 5. March. "It's Tulip Time In Holland," "My Tom Tom .Man" Whitney. - Part 2. 6. March, "King Over AH" Scouton. 7. Selection, "Ermine" Meyrelles. 8. March, "Militaire" Schubert. Waltz, "Ethiopia" Frank Mahl. 10. March, "Alabama Jubilee" George L. Cobb.

FAMILY TO MEET

- EATON. O., Aug. 6. The annual reunion of the Ashworth family will be held Saturday at the county fair grounds. The Ashworth clan is one of the largest in the county, and several hundred members of the family will attend. The annual reunion of the Ozias-Christman families was held Thursday.

Africa has and dialects.

276 spoken languages

SUPERFLUOUS HAIR REMOVERS ARE DANGEROUS Don't Use Poisonous So-Call-ed Superfluous Hair Removers.

A Race of Athletes. Surely we are becoming an athletic people. Look at the tennis courts, the golf links, the ball grounds on every side and consider how few there were ten years ago. It is a healthy sign of the times. It means greater things ahead with stronger men and women to do the world's work. These sports have, of course, developed specialized needs in dress and equipment, but they are needs easily supplied. A glance through the advertising columns of The Palladium will nine times out of ten answer the questions of the athletic man or woman.

When You Aire Away

on your vacation enjoying the charms and benefits of new scenes or travelling on business or pleasure, the advantages of home are often lacking and most times the services of a physician are unavailable or else you do not care to go a strange doctor. Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey gives to the sick in a ready assimilable form the nourishment and tonic properties from barley and other grains, wfiich are

tne great strength-giving foods. When you go away this year, be sure to take along a supply of Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey THE BEST FOR ALL EKERSENCIES A change In the mode of life, perhaps drinking water or several other simple causes may produce indisposition. t JfL "!e Z?" ?houli hKP Punys-the traveller's safeguard at hand. It Is the most efficacious remedy for chills, fever, colds, dysentery, diarrhoea, nausea and all summer ills. Be sure and put a bottle of two in your Kriix

"ii iRirryo cna nccp vea." Sold In SEALED BOTTLES ONLY. Beware of Imitations.

matt ffJSjrr v"1 '"w notr UU It '1-00 perbottto. If he anrat supply van, writs us, we win talyoawfcsrsta petit fctedtoai hookletfree.

The Duffy Malt Whiskey Co, Rochester, N. Y.

sik m m- m

jmmmtmwb mwmm

For

Seventy-five Years this pure soap has been used by careful housewives. Always the same quality Harmless to Clothes and i Hands.

9

You may escape permanent injury if you use so-called hair removers, but you cannot escape an increased growth because after each removal the hair is

bound to grow out more bristly and in time It will become bo coarse that nothing will remove it but a razor. The only safe way to remove hair is to devitalize it. It Is useless to use pastes or rub-on preparations because they only remove hair from the surface of the skin. DeMiracle, the original liquid depilatory, devitalizes hair by attacking It under the skin as well as on the skin. Imitations of DeMiracle are as worthless as pastes and rub-on preparations because they lack certain ingredients that DeMiracle alone contains which give it the power to rob hair of its vitality. Remember, DeMiracle Is the only depilatory that has a binding guarantee in each package which entitles you to your money if it falls. Insist on- the genuine DeMiracle and you will get the original liquid hair remover. Others are worthless imitations refuse them. DeMiracle is 6old in three sizes, 50c, $1.00 and $2.00 bottles. The larger sizes are the most economical for dermatologists and large users to buy. If your dealer will not supply you buy a bottle at Clem Thistlethwalte's drug stores or order direct from us. The truth about the treatment of superfluous hair mailed in plain sealed envelope on request.. DeMiracle Chemical Co., Dept. B, Park Ave. and 129th St., New York. Adv.

THE PULLMAN CAR 38 H. P., fully equipped, complete at $740.00 Watch for It. See it. Buy It. PHONE 1992 OR THE AUTO INN

(CHnnuminigoIldl

Summer Time Proves 'it's Always Good

99

These hot days when it is so very hard to keep anything, try Churngold.

It's always fresh and sweet and with very little care keeps fresh and sweet longer than you would expect. What a wonderful spread for bread is Churngold to withstand the effects

i

IGHURNGOLDI

of sultry days and hot nights. But it is certainly prov

ing itself worthy of its name "Gold of the Churn." This ;Week try just one pound you will j continue to use it. J 25c per Lb.

Sold Only by

Orttoin L. Bcwrlly

610 South 11th Street.

Phone 2788.

ENOUGH SAID For

Kryptok Lenses

You Had Better See

Edmunds -- Optometrist

10 NORTH NINTH STREET.

PHONE 2765

HOUSING CONDITIONS AS CAUSE OF DEATH ; OF YOUNG INFANT "" : The insanitary conditions surrounding the rearing of Annabelle Llnzey,

the infant child of Mrs. Viola Linzey,

903 North Fourteenth street, is the principle cause of the sudden death, of the child, according to the report of Deputy Coroner Pierce. The child died August 1,. after one day of severe illness, during which no physician was called. . . - . Neighbors testified before Coroner Pierce that the mother of the child did not call a physician until the child was dying, although .the child, had been in a dangerous condition for a day. . ;It is probable that an investigation will be conducted into the case by the prosecutor, to ascertain the actual conditions surrounding the death of the child. , The mother, however, testified before the coroner that 6he call-

Hot Days Are coming back and real soon, so don't put off any longer buying LOEHR & KLUTE CLOTHES Absolutely Pure Wool Nothing Else Priced at 910.00 to $25.00 Palm Beach and MohanSuits $6.50 up to $15.00 Summer Furnishings at Reasonable Prices Sport Shirts, 50c, $1 and $1.50 Sport Ties 50c, Boys Sport Waists 50c and fl.00. Palm Beach and White Serge Trousers. Boys' Wash Suits at 50c to $1.50 Eastern Indiana's Greatest Store for Men and Boys.

Ti tZ iTll r I

e cut? a

ed a physician after Mrs. Celie Saunders. 818 North Fourteenth street, a neighbor, had warned her that the child was dying. The mother said she thought her . child - was merely troubled with stomach disorders and that there was nothing serious to be feared. The child was 11 months and 25 days old. -

REPORTS HEN'S CACKLE.

EVANSVIUJJ, ind, Aug. . -Be cause a hen cackled after laying , as egg. said hen ha vine hn in tn.n

via , parcel post, Felix .Barrow, super

lnienaeni oi iocai maus, reported tb matter to the postoffice department at Washington. ; .

MM

One Dollar Off On any $3.50, $4.00, $4.50 and $5.00 Low. Shoe in the Store. .

25 to 50 Discount On the cheaper grades

One special lot of Ladies' Small sizes at $1.00 a pair

All Boys' Misses' and Children's Low Shoes at Big Discounts.

Tomorrow Saturday Is the Last Day of Our Dollar Shoe Sale.

111

i '

SUM

(Gireateir Saicirnllnces

Pun Reffrggerfflttoirs, Go-Cartts,

SAVINGS OF FULLY ONE-THIRD ON ALL MAKES OF REFRIGERATORS

. $33.00 White Enamel Solid Oak Refrigerators now $23.50 $29.75 Solid Oak Refrigerators, price now $22.00 $24.00 Solid Oak Refrigerators, price now $19.20 $20.00 Solid Oak Odorless Refrigerators, price now $16.00 $13.75 Solid Oak Odorless Refrigerators, price now $11.00 $9.50 Solid Oak Odorless Refrigerators, price now $6.95 $8.00 Solid Oak Odorless Refrigerators, price now. .$5.00

T L U REFRIGERATORS f

WATERLOO. IOWA

Beautiful, Durable IKeedl Fnnmntaire For Less We have only five Couch Hammocks left and they are wonderful bargains. Get one now for that Sleeping Porch. Can be used the year around. 110.00 COUCH HAMMOCK, made of best rtjjr QQ canvas and real bed springs, now only pD0 Others carry the same rate of discount. All Reed and Fibre Rockers. Chairs, Settees and Swings to close out now at a fraction of their value.

lutehen Cabinets

Our "Quaker" Cabinet has every modern convenience. We have . a special August Sale price on this d-fl Q QpT Cabinet pldO0 Roll Door Cabinet, all oak, now $19.75

A New Hoosler Is Out See

it. , $9.00 less

now

$24.50

SPEOAL MM

$1.00

27x54 Special Velvet Rug, now

$1.00 Ladder Stool, now TO $2.00 Extra Large Mop and Quart of Oil Sl.OO Jumbo Basins. 22 inches in diameter 29 Our Hygeno Carpet Sweepers at 81.18 12x12 Heavy Plate Mirror 69 Extra Large "Granite Preserving Kettle 25 Potato Pots with lid 29 Cedar Floor Mop and Oil, our price at 49 Special Reed Rocker, roll arm. at $1.98 EXTRA SPECIAL Art Craft China Closet now 89.60 $20.00 Oak China Closets. $15.85 $37.00 Oak China Closets. $26.75 Others will go at a fraction of their worth.

Reed and Folding

WE PAY THE FREIGHT ANYWHERE WITHIN 200 MILES OF RICHMOND

mmmmmmummmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmt

We Show the Largest Line of Go-Carts and Carriages In the City. $35.00 Round Reed Carriage, gray or - brown finish, now t S28.00 $33.00 Round Reed Carriage, gray or brown finish, now at - S26.40 $29.75 Flat Reed Carriage, gray, or brown finish., now $23.75 One $25.00 Pullman Carriage. I $12.50 Folding Carts from $1.98, $3.50. $4.95, $6.50, $9.00, $12 Up. Come in and. look over our Allwin and Sturgis lines. .

it am

y STREET,

LAJ COR. 9TH