Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 40, Number 282, 8 November 1915 — Page 11
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yks kictit'ovp PallaJUW ANpoTjiTEMGaAU, mootay, hov. a, wis
PAGEELEV21J
DoU Ghats For Housewives
Dried Cera. .: eseee 4brn is. a luxury a tlki ttlte Winter Tne eveperat. 4 com thai OM . bwy ee 6t fee compered wit H ia flavor AM cam which atay be tefV frees dinner, or fraee eon cooked lor the hurpose, should be out tutta tad cob end spread on platters or agate Metes ud dried slowly la the waning heat of the oven stir occasionally, aad when dry, place
in moia sugar or hw oe i. nltc. If this la done
each day when com la plentiful, quit
A Word About Myself and My Little Plan
It "would be. useless for one whose , actios is confined solely to the screen to aay that we do not miss the mag. netlc presence and entbuelaatte applause of an audience. We do miss . both very much, and while the realism and charm of nature In scenario work compensate for many things, never, theless we miss that personal touch with the public that restrains, suggests, encourages and Inspires. One whose audiences consist day af- ) ter day solely of a director and prop . erty man has no direct communication 'with the public except through Its letters to him, and it has occurred to me that in my case I might strengthen and facilitate this method of communication by using the press as a me- , dlum. j It will not only be simpler, then, for -my letter friends to reach ma. bat the fact that we are reading the same .1 newspaper every day, with our letters to each other In It, will give our as? soclatlon that little, Intimate, home--.like touch It needs to enable us to Ibe of mutual help. It will be Just as J If we were gathered around the same table to make our little plana tor the future, to laugh at the plans that went awry, to cheer each other, and perhaps to tease each other a little bit, for I contend that we tease always 'when we love.
A Welcome Visiter. What great times we will have! The newspaper, which has always meant something to which father has the prior right, gets cross about if it is late and grumbllngly hides behind, will then have a more personal, a more Intimate, meaning to each of ns. Always the one visitor every member of the family welcomes, think bow much warmer that welcome will be when it become the medium of our dally little friendly talks. In a very pleasing way the scenario artist has an advantage over what some pleases to call the "legitimate" We do not have the exquisite joy of seeing the smiles and tears in the faces before us; w miss the supreme bliss of the curtain call, but and think what this meanslour friends, our admirers, our critics are not confined to the few cities where he have appeared. They are broadcast, and as letters i from every point in the alobe, from Scuth Africa to Alaska, patis through our hands, we can afford to smile a little triumphantly at our bowing and temping rival. True, we have not the joy of the curtain call, but neither are ours the narrow limitations of one little stage. He has a season In Chicago, for Instance, and only those who are fortunate enough to be in Chicago see him. We have a few busy days in studio, in the country, on the hills or in the valley, wherever realism takes us, and appear in the next month almost all over the world. And those to whom -ce appear, realizing that we are blind to tears and smiles and deaf to applause, and feeling that they must find an Outlet for their admiration, find it through the ink-bottle. Bless its Inky face! I say. for it has done more through those who hover around It to encourage and help me than anything else in the world. What a greater medium of help the newspaper will now become! An Early Awakening. Would it make us feel more at home, I wonder. If I tell my friends right at the beginning something about myself? I was a tiny girl of four when my aunt carried me downstairs one morning, and I knew by the manner in which she held me tight to her breast when we passed a certain door that
my father lay dead behind it. I know too (the tragic precocity of it!), that I was my mother's oldest child, and now must help her. We had no means. I was four, Lotlie was three. Jack was a baby in arms, and our grandmother, a helpless paralytic, was a more hopeless burden than we. In looking backward now, I can aee that the seriousness of our situation was magnified In my childish imagination. I seem. In my mind's eye now, never to have known the care-free, happy-hearted childhood which is every child's due. I always clung closely to my mother, as it I instinctively knew that she must not be left alone to grieve and work, and one of the first questions I remember asking her was how many years it would be till I would be old enough to work and help her and of counting off the years on my fingers when she replied that I could not earn money before I was fourteen. But Qod was good to me and I did not have to wait that long.
ANSWERS TO 'CORRESPONDENTS.
Phyllis, sixteen, writes front Seattle to ask which I think is greater a home life or a career. A home-life, be
yond doubt. We tffco were foolish en
ough to have chosen a career have nothing but empty hands and irai
when we are old. And empty heart.
too-
Mrs. R. M. concludes a long letter with the question: '1 have begged and threatened and told her of his worth-
lessness, but she refuses to give him up. What shall I do now?" If girls 14 Dallas are like all other girl, this mother has fairly driven the girl into
the man's arms. Of course she wont rive him ud under such encouraging
treatment. Try praising the man tat each traits as even the will -see he
does not possess. Alice, a little Indian airl who en
closes a picture showing-the straightest of hair, wishes to know If use of the curling Iron works Injury. I do not
know from experience; I have saver used It. but am auite sure that it does
the hair no good to cook the life out of it. Straight hair is as pretty as cur
ly if kept well groomed.
a supply wfi( be accumulated, at alest no expense. To use the dried! cr soak over night in cold water and. cook aloiy -several: hoar, untfl the wate has Marly all evaporated; add salt and butter to taste. Canned corn can set equal hti la flavor. Tomato Soap. :'; To one quart of stewed tomatoes add a put of stock (or- water), one carrot t, a Tew celery tops, oae bay-leaf, one onion and cook slowly tor fifteen minute.. Rub together two tablespoons
the salxtar. stir until all boil (having added pepper and salt to taste) press through a sieve, reheat and serve.
- The nearest we caa earn to this diai
tlnctively Italian dish with the mean; we aave-atoar cemmaad to this coun-J try is to use yellow com meal for It j unless the genuine article can be pro-! cared from an Italian grocer. The tan-!
ltation is not as good a copy of the original as could be wished, but It Is by no means to be despised. Into a pint of boiling water, slightly salted, stir enough yellow corn meal to make a good mush and cook about an hour, stirring now and then. When It Is thoroughly done take It out by the spoonful and put it on a dish and pour over it a cupful of highly seasoned tomato sauce; strew cheese over this, set the dish la the oven for five mln-
utes and than sand to (able. good brown gravy may be need lastead of tomato eauoe, or: yon may mix gravy and tomato sauce together. :
At Movies Tonight
. LYRIC i "The Idle Rich" coma to the Lyric tonight. Mr. Rawsberry was the laziest mortal that ever rolled over In bed for another hour'a torpidity. When the alarm clock went off on a certain morning In November he opened one eye and looked at It disapprovingly, and then turned ever for another nap.
In the meantime ala wife, Eva, aad the maid were preparing breakfast lira. Rawsberry was aaxtoua to have her laxy spouse get up tor she lateasd to give a lawn' party thatday and
fteeded the bed to T0T the visitors'
wraps and hats trpodT So, while hubby slept, she turned the hands of the clack backward and edjneled esn perpetual alarm, ao that It couldnt be turned off with out Batiks a monkey wrench. Rawaberry Jumped clean, out of bed wien he kaard tao clock's ear-splitting roar a tew memenu later. Polling hla revolver from beneath a pillow, he took one shot at the clock and two mom at the fat last-1 ler who awaited for htm to arise. Letters to the number of 3.SSMTS. ' forming 7?5.693worda. 11.737 Terse. 1.189 chapters and 6 books, make up the Bible. .
Feel Fine! Take "Cascarels" For Liver, Bowels Spend 10 Cents! Dont Stay Bilious, Sick, Headachy, Constipated Can't Harm You! Best Cathartic for Men, Women and Children. Enjoy lite! Your system is filled with an accumulation of bile and bow el poison which keeps you bilious, headachy, dizzy, tongue coated, breath bad and stomach sour Why don't you get a 10-cent box of Caseareta at the drug store and feel bully. Take Cascarets tonight and enjoy the nicest, gentlest liver and bowel cleaning you ever experienced. You'll wake up with a clear head, clear tongue, lively step, rosy skin and looking and feeling tit. Mothers can give a whole Cascaret to a sick, cross, bilious, feverish child any time they are harmless hever gripe or sicken. Adv.
WATCH
FOR THESE
CIRCLES!
WAIT!
Headache From A Cold? Listen
Pane's Cold Compound"
Ends Severe Colds or 1 Grippe in Few Hours.
Your cold will break and all grippe misery end after taking a dose of "Pape's Cold Compound" every two hours until three doses are taken. It promptly opens clogged-up nostrils and air passages in the head, stops nasty discbarge or nose run. nlng, relieves sick headache, dullness, feverlshness, sore throat, sneezing, soreness and stiffness. k Don't stay stuffed-up! Quit blowing end snuffling! Ease your throbbing head nothing else in the world gives such prompt relief as Tape's Cold Compound," which costs only 25 cents at auy drug store It acts without asi si stance, tastes nee, and causes no in convenience. Accept no substitute. iAdr.
The Photograph As A CtaisUmas
Stands Supreme
FRANK J. PARSONS WALTER L. DALDEY ARTHUR L BUNDY
Members of the National Association
NOT a" So much comment has bean aroused among cigarette smokers by the sensible suggestions in this advertisement that we have received several letters from Richmond men. suggesting that the advertise ment be reprinted for the benefit of those who missed seeing It In last Week's papers. -Clip this out and keep it as It will not appear again.
t f 2Jr Z: ' LIGGETT MYERS TOBACCO CO.
Get all Hie smoke-pleasure you pay Jon Find the right cigarette a SENSIBLE one that fits your own likes and dislikes.
but. Ah will help you find it.
TsUdiGfer--iii fashions, foods and pretty girls. Also fat otjargties. , x't?A!22 started ot W pleas raty mam's'' . taste would end up by ptoaing none.
Moat f jpt Efca Mir dsatttt stncJm dclkioualv 000
' tad r&tJLie The Mexican likes his hot and dry. with a nloe KtOs peppery rfrajr So it. Cent men Kke a d-aiette wholesomely, fragrantly etsti. Others of us hunt for a eigeTette almost as heavy wft ss l)lgwa)J Epjss Most of ua want an "eaty" cigarette a SENSIBLE one, so. that no matter how steadily or how many we smoke, well fed as fit as s dddle. Other men. though, don't care about that. They, smoke only a fewso they want kkk Kke s male's in each puff 1 All of us want our smoke "full-bodied it must tatMy that amokehunger. But the cigarette that just fills the bill for tfou may not do at aH for your next-door neighbor. . . , w Somtuiheft amof all tie brands on the market i the cm jmettigkt cigarette for YOU I Maybe Hi the very one you have now in your . pocket- are you SURE t Maybe it's some entirely differed" cigaretteit may or may not he Fatima. But "find it!" Until you do, you're cheating yourself out of whole lot of stroke-pleasure. Also you're wasting some money. Hszf to find "youn" To SVOid bUndly trying too many different cigarettes, ask yourself, first of all, this question: "Jsujf snes do I tike mm agarette t" If you smoke only a few every day, you may prefer a cigarette which is rather rich or heavy and "oily.'f Or you may like one which bat a rather strong "oriental" taste with a pungency almost like perfume. Or you may want a cigarette with that noticeably "sweetish" Egyptian
flavor. But If you smoke quite often if you would like to smoke whenever you feel Jike it and without any effect . on the tongue or throat or any fear of a heavy or "heady ' feeling afterwards then you should choose some cigarette , such as Fatima,' a cigarette composed of all-pure tobaccos' 4 of considerable aroma, mellowed by being aged and care- . fully blended to produce -A fragrant and wholesomely mild,' ' ' yet "full-bodied smoke. And the smoke must be noticeably COOL. For otherwise your tongue or your throat -will soon signal you to stop smoking so often. If you will ask any Fatima smoker, he will tell you that Fatimas never make him .i'feel mean,' no matter .how many he smokes. That 1s why Fatimas are considered the asort tennble cigarette by such a large majority of smokers. And that it probably the wain reason why hardly any Fatima smofcert ever switch They Hke "a sensible cigarette and one with a good, pure taste to it. eBut the, Taste i up to You All cigarettes are pure, but when it comes to the taste, nobody can help you choose. You simply have to decide for yourself. Of course, Fatima's taste may not appeal to you. But most men who try Fatimas like the taste so well that they seek no further otherwise Fatimas could never have toon and held their 'enormous and growing leadership amounting to over one and a half BILLION cigarettes a .year. The one purpose of this advertisement is to ask you in a fair and square way to give Fatimas 20 fbr J6c) a good trial. If they don't happen to suit your taste, you'll quit smoking them of course. But if you like Fatimas as well as MOST men do, you'll be mighty glad you read this advertisement and ACTED ON ITI - Below are two simple tests which you can easily make and Which may help you find your sensible cigarette.
It may or may not be Fatima. But be fair to yourself
and find
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