Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 42, Number 312, 12 November 1917 — Page 5
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CHURCHES HAVE SERVICES F REFORMATION Special Music Given In Both Services Offering Brings $101. - With the morning service in charge or St. John's Lutheran hurch, Rev. Alexander Nlcklas, paster, and the evening service arranged for by Trinity Lutheran church. Rev. Oscar Tressel, pastor, the four hundredth anniversary of the Reformation was celebrated Sunday in an appropriate- manner at St. John's church. The church was decorated with chrysanthemums and ferns. Professor Karl Hemmlnghaus, of Woodville, Ohio, head of the normal school of Wodville, preached tho morning sermon. Which was in German. There was special music by St. John's orchestra under the direction of Professor Zimmerman. There were also several numbers by the choir. Misses Flora and Oda Stunn sang a duet. In the evening Rev. R. Golloday of Grace Lutheran church, Columbus, Ohio, preached the sermon in English. Mrs. Charles Igelman sang a solo. Other music numbers were furnished by the choir of Trinity church and Miss Edna Deuker, organ. Both services were largely attended by members of the congregations and out of town Lutherans. An offering of $101 was taken and will be used for the benevolent work of the synod.
H ottsehold
MENU HINT 1 Breakfast Grape Fruit Corn Muffins Nut Margarine Luncheon Tomato Toast Eggless Butterless Chocolate Cake Stewed Pigs Tea Dinner Baked Bean Loaf Boston Brown Bread Mustard Pickles Old-Fashioned Cup Custard Wafers Tea . NO NEED TO WASTE All celery leaves should be dried for eeasoning soups, stews and gravies. Save vaster from potatoes and vegetables for soup. A small baking powder box, perforated with an ice pick, can be used for celery leaves, onions or spices, for seasoning stews or soups, and saves straining which often causes waste. Always use pulp from jellies, put through sieve or colander, add brown sugar, a little cinnamon and ginger and make fruit butter for future use. There is no need of waste If forethought is used. Cooking economically Is a science and is a vocation to be proud of if properly done. THE TABLE Scrapple (a most palatable dish) Take the head, heart and any lean scraps of port, and boil until flesh slips easily from bones, remove fat, gristle ard tones, then chop meat fine. Set liquor in which meat was boiled aside until cold, take the cake of fat from ssrfacG and return, liquor to the fire. When it boils put in the chopped meat and season well with pepper and salt. Thicken with com mel as you would letting it slip through tie firLgers slowly to prevent lumps. Cook s-h hour, stirring constantly at first, afterwards putting bacS on the rare in a position to boil gently. When dene, pour into a long, square pan, not too deep, and mold. In cold weather this can be kept several weeis. Cut into slices when cold and fry brown. Cheap and delicious breakEscslloped Ham and Egs Tahe eual amount of chopped ham and bread crumbs, moisten with milk and season with a little butter and pepper. Put into baking dish and take about ten minutes. Take out of oven and breai: on as many eggs as thre are people to seve. Put in oven and bake till eggs are done. C3 rrot and Peanut Butter Loaf Mix thoroughly three-quarters cup peanut butter, thr6s-fourth cup bread crumbs, one-half teaspoonful salt, one teaspoon chopped onion, one well beaten egg. Shape into a loaf, sprinkle with buttered crumbs, place in well greased pan and bake twenty minutes. Serve with following sauce: To one-half cup chopped oelery add one cup hot water, cook ten minutes, then strain. To the liquid add three-fourths cup milk, thicken with one tablespoon flour rolled in a little butter. Season to taBte and pour around loaf. Pium Pudding Without Sugar or Egg3 Stir thoroughly together the followins ingrediectc: One cup finely
FATHER .
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Heart and Home Problems
Dear Mrs. Thompson: I am a high school graduate and I have started to wcrk in a department store. I was started on a very low salary just as all the girl were. I ' wouldn't mind it so much only girls who just went to grammar school, and some who didn't even graduate, are getting just as much or more than I am. I have ben working at this place for four weeks and I have almost . decided to leave. Don't you think that as long as I am better educated than "most other girls that 1 ought to get better pay? I was always told while I was In school that the more education you 7 cv.JH.-- jf ,1 .-i -,"""'i!fc""2' 5 SJ-2,X: j got the higher pay you would get. UNDECIDED. ""Business concerns pay their employees for the amount of work they can turn out and not for "the extent of their education. When you prove by the quality of what you do that you are worth more to your employer than the other girls, you will be raised accordingly. Don't ba a quitter. Take an interest In everything you do, and study further. The most hopeless person in the world is the one who thinks he knows it all. There- is a law of compensation Ralph Waldo Emerson writes about it. It is a natural law, not man-made, and it never fails. We get out of life only so much as we put into it. If you chopped suet, two cups fine bread crumbs, one cup molasses, one cup chopped raisins, one cup currants, one teaspoon (level) salt, one teaspoon each of cloves, cinnamon, allspice and soda, one cup milk, flour enough to make a stiff batter. Put Into well greased pudding mold, cover closely, set into a larger kettle close covered and half fall of boiling water, adding more as It boils away. Steam not less than four hours. This pudding Is sure to be a success for one containing neither eggs, butter nor sugar. Half will serve eight people, but it can be steamed over again If kept closely covered in meantime. Serve common sweet sauce. Wanted to Be Sure. Wlfey "Tom, dear, I wish you'd taste this mll and see if it's perfectly sweet. If it's the least bit sour I mustn't give a drop of it to poor little Fifl." . BEHIND THE NEW "SPUG" CAMPAIGN JL. MRS. toN JOHNSON Mrs. Ben Johnson, wife of the congressman from Kentucky, is -working hard to forward the "SPUG" movement in Washington.. The prevention of useless Christmas gifts this year will be more important than heretofore and much of the money, Mrs. Johnson believes, may be used for the purchase of comforts for soldiers and sailors. Washington is asi sting the movement by issuing certificates, purchasable at $4.12 and payable in five years at $5.
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THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM.
rre? gve good service where you are, even if it is not appreciated now, the returns will come back to you. You will grow too big for your job, and some one who sees your, worth. will match you up. My advice is to take a commercial course at night school and to work hard and learn all you can during the day., Dear Mrs. Thompson: I have been going with a certain girl here for two years now, and after my first year with her I became engaged. Then we would. have little spats and break up for a week or so and when I would see her with another fellow I would go back to her again and she ould be my own girl again. Can you tell me if I really do love her or am I kidding her along? She says she loves me and I tell her I love her, but please let me know for I am verv anxious. She is also a year older than I. A FRIEND. It often happens that two young people, will go on like this for years caring for each other more than even they themselves know, having their little quarrels and breaking up occas ionally, but at the same time quite in love with each other. In a case like that there is only one thing to do and that is to wait. At the present time you and she are quarrelling probably because you have different points of view, but as you both get older your views will probably become more nearly the same, and some day you may realize that more is to be gained by giving in to each other more and avoiding quarrels. This girl probably knows that the easiest way to bother you is to go with another fellow and she takes that means to make you come back to her. If you act as if you didn't care at all,' perhaps she would not do it. It would be worth while to try that for awhile. In most cases it is best for the man to be at least two years older, but perhaps in your case it is all right You are the one to judge of that. Dear Mrs. Thompson: I am a redhaired girl and I love the color of red. My hair is a rather dark red and my complexion is fair. My eyes are brown. I saw a red and black hat which I think is very becoming to me and I
cle ars away pimple s
No one knows the humiliation of being a "wall flower' ' betterthir. the gir! with a red, rough, pimply complcxiorliy&srskin is riot fresh and smooth, or hss suffered from an unwise use o cosmetics, try Resinol Soao and Resinol Ointment for a week and see if they
First Annual DISPLAY of OVERLAND ENCLOSED CARS Week beginning Nov. 1 2 TALCOTT OVERLAND CO. Main and Twelfth Sts.
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All Akron Walks to Work When Street Car Men Walk Out AKRON, Ohio. Nov. 12. All Akron walked to work this morning or hung on over-crowded jitneys. More than 1,000 street car men were on strike on every line in the city and every line originating from Akron. The strike includes the interurban lines to Cleveland, Ravenna, Kent, Cuyahoga Falls, Barberton and Wadsworta. The only cars touching Akron in operation were the Canton-Akron interurbans, employes of which are not in eluded in the local division of the union. Canton car crews were running only to the eastern city limits and taking no chance of coming Into the city. A heavy fog hung over the city, making walking uncertain and driving unsafe. At evety street. car stop men and women who did not realize that a strike was on were waiting for cars to come. - The strike came with dramatic suddenness. The public had been forewarned by a strike vote of the union Saturday morning but events that followed gave promise of a settlement. The men are striking for a wage increase of 10 cents an hour. 2,000 FIREMEN NEEDED FOR UNCLE SAM'S NAVY A call for 2,000 firemen, third class, has been issued by the navy department, according to instrucions received Monday by Navy Recruiting Officer Goldfarb. Enlistments are also wanted for 300 mess attendants. Negroes are eligible for this branch of naval service. JFor further 'particulars, applicants should consult Recruiter Goldfarb at the post office. would like to buy It Do you think I I could wear a black hat with brick-red trimming? STRAWBERRY ANNE. Usually red-haired people do not wear red well. I would not think that you could wear brick-red, but I cannot 6ay definitely because I have not seen you in it. CZ)orit refuse that invitation' because nfa poor complexion don't begin to make a blessed difference. They also help to make hands ztA arms soft and white, and to keep the hair dindruff. live, glossy ar.d free from AU 4it essts se2 Ret no! Oirtacct --i S.esicl Sotp Forilroee?lodeci,writetoIit.i:-X, Reiiaa 2altoec, MtL You'd better try the S p,i...i.i .mi. Evenings
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MONDAY, NOV. 12, 1917.
ME Revelations BY. ADELE' MY FIRST PARTY IS ARRANGED When I had recovered from my astonishment at Dicky's unceremonious departure I again started to write to Mrs. Helen Brainerd Smith, secretary of the Lotus Study Club. It was now Saturday evening, and I had received her courteous letter-asking me to consider the history class of her club, Wednesday morning. I went to my room and switched on the electric drop light over my desk, an old-fashioned solid affair, which had been my mother's and which I vnlued beyond price, and returned to get my pen, which Dicky had used to wTite his check. ' As I picked up the pen my eyes fell upon Dicky's checkbook, from which he had hastily filled out the check for the old artist. It lay open at the page from which he had taken the check, and I could not help seeing the figures on the stub $150. I bent closer to see the name. If I were to take over the finances of the family, 1 told myself, I had a right to see where the money was going. Yes, the name on the stub was Maxon, Horace Maxon. One hundred and fifty dollars! I repeated the figures to myself as I went back to my room to write my note. I hope I am not parsimonious, and I al
That's
all fashion in MAIICOlOOITIIillf!
Tat Wholesome Foods "iirACTi? liTATnnur1"
That's good advice of Herbert C. Hoover and Whelan's Corn Meal will back him up every step. There is nothing more wholesome than good Corn Bread. It's a good food for men, women and children. There's nothing better
of perfection in com flour. With Whelan's Old Fashioned Burr (made fresh daily) Corn Meal, your success in Com Bread is assured from the start. And There's No Waste Mighty few crumbs will find their way to the garbage can. All will be eaten and eaten with relish. Your Grocery receives it fresh daily and will sell it to you as the best Corn Meal. Sign the Food Pledge and eat Whelan's Yellow or White Com Meal.
HER
Tine 31-33 SOUTH 6TH ST.
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of a Wife GARRISON ways have tried to do my share of social service. Out of mv salarv T al ways, contributed a certain proportion' to the societies which have charge of; the charitable work, of the city, and in addition I gave some of my time to help the regular workers in my district In times of emergency. But this loan to a man whom I had learned was a constant borrower seemed criminal in Its recklessness. At the risk of more unpleasantness, I resolved to speak to Dicky, about it when he came back. He would ruin himself if he persisted In doing things like this. In the meantime I would write my note. I thought it over for a few minutes, my invariable practice in writing a letter, and then wrote. 46 East Twenty-ninth Street, (Apartment 4.) My Dear Mrs. Smith I shall be glad to consider taking up the work of which you spoke in your note of last Tuesday, the 12th. I can meet you at any time to make necessary arrangements. I should be glad to have you come to my home, or if it be more-convenient for you I can meet you elsewhere. If you will telephone me a few hours beforehand, we probably can arrange a meeting place which will be convenient for both of us. My telephone number is Madison Square
to make it with than Whelan's Corn Meal. It is the acm
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By McManus, OVEPs-KCHJtEL rWD 246S. Thanking you for your thought of me, I am Yours very truly, MARGARBT SPENCER GRAHAM. Mrs. Helen Brainerd Smith. Secretary Lotus Study Club, 215 West Washington Avenue. I read the letter over, noting that in its context three out. of its five sentences besan with the letter "I." The third sentence, I changed into two, reading, "Can you come to my-home? If that is not convenient for you, however, I can meet you elsewhere." Then I copied the letter over, addressed the envelope, blotted it, put the letter inside, sealed the envelope and stamped it. As I was debating whether to call Katie to post the letter or to go myself, she appeared at my door. NEGRESS FINED Ethel Whitfield a negrees, was fined $25 and costs by Judge Fox in circuit court Monday morning on a statutory charge. She was found guilty of living with Houston Delaney, a negro, in the Boston railroad yards, without having a marriage certificate. She was arrested some time ago, when Delaney was accidentally shot and seriously wounded. An effort was made to Indict the woman for the shooting, but the testimony of all witnesses in the matter was that the shooting was accidentaL Palladium Want Ads Pay. rl tt.J PHONE 1679
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