Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 42, Number 321, 22 November 1917 — Page 5
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, THURSDAY, NOV. 22, 1917.
PAGE FIVE
$50,000 IN LOOT IS RECOVERED
ELKHART. Ind., Nov. 22. Fifty thousand dollars worth of merchandise has been found In the home of .Gus Ludwig, 50 yeafs old, a carpenter and Ludwlg and Max Shuman, 30 years old, Ludwlg's cousin are under arrest charged with stealing the plunder from the American Express company. According to Ludwig's confession Shuman, who was a driver of an express wagon in Chicago, stole the goods and shipped it to Goshen, Ind., where Ludwig would get it and bring here, repack and consign to Shuman. Shuman was arrested in Chicago and brought here following Ludwig's alleged confession. Ludwig has frequently been accused of theft and he was regarded as a 1 1 x - m mn
Kieinomaniac. i wo years ago omcens found $1,500 worth of plunder in his shed but there was not sufficient evidence at the time to convict him.
I WILLIAMSBURG, IND.
Mrs. Ada Converce of Wisconsin,
has been spending a few days the last week with Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Blair of
this place Rev. Cloyd of this place conducted a home coming at Union Center Sunday, which was well attend
ed. Little Miss Katherine Caty gave the welcome address which was fine. Other selections were given by Mrs. Mabel Tharp, Miss Crate Thornburg,
Col well Miller and others. A number of song selections were rendered. At
the noon hour a fine dinner such as
tne center ladies know now to serve was enjoyed by all.... Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Oberander, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Fudge and daughter, Ruth and Mrs. O. W. Hartup, called on Winfield Piehe and family Sunday evening. They also attended services at the M. E. church. . ..Weldon Huber of Ridgeville was shaking hands with friends in this place Sunday. .. .Rev Cloyd preached at the M. E. church Sunday night as Rev. Ulmer is conducting his series of meetings at Chester Mrs. Edna Kenley was a Richmond shopper Saturday. .. .Mr. and Mrs. Ora Pitts entertained to dinner Sunday Mr. Omer Pearce and family. .. .The Red Cross will hold its first meeting at the town hall Friday night. Everybody that wishes to is invited to attend Mrs. Clarence Pitts is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. M. Edwards at Indianapolis. ....Mr. and Mrs. Omer Wolf and Mr. and Mrs. Line Watkins motored to Muncie Sunday George Armstrongs have purchased a new victrola. . . .Mr. and Mrs. Omer Pearce, Mr. and Mrs. Omer Wolf, Mr. and Mrs. Line Watkins formed a theatre party at the Afni-rmr ffunrlnv AVAninP'
Heart and Home Problems
Dear Mrs. Thompson: (1) How
would you word a request to take a lady to a party-
(2) When at a party is it neces
sary to stay with your partner all the evening.
(3) Who should suggest leaving for ' home, the lady or
gentleman? (4) Should the gentleman call at the lady's house for her? THANK YOU. (1) It depends on how well you know the lady. If you are pretty well acquainted with her, Just write a note telling her In your own words about the pary, saying when and wnere and that you would like to have her go with you. If you wish to make the invitation a little more
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formal, you might word it something like this: Dear Miss Smith: I would be very pleased to have you accompany me to the Christmas Party given by the Brown Sisters Monday evening, the twenty-fourth of December, at their home. The guests are requested to be there promptly at eight, and- if you care to go with me, I will call for you at seven-thirty. Mr. White. Of course you would substitute the correct names and date, etc., in place
of the Imaginary ones I have given In the note. (2) No, at most parties there are times when the men get together for a while and the ladies do the same; but for the most part of the evening it is more polite for the gentleman to be with his partner, or at least within call, so that if she isn't being well entertained he can go to her. The gentleman shouldn't avoid all others but his partner, but on the other hand he should not neglect her. (3) Whichever one wishes to go first. Usually the lady will show, by rome thing she does or says that she
is ready, and in such a case the gentleman should ; then suggest leaving. (4) The gentleman should call for the lady at her home, and she should also see her home. Dear Mrs. Thompson : I am eighteen years of age. I used to live in another town and while there I went with a boy whom I loved at first sight. I also went with his brother and he acted as though he cared a good deal for. me. I moved away about a year ago and he has never written to the, although he knows my - address-I wrote to girls and they tell me he says pretty nice things about me. (1) Would you write to him first? (2) Do you think he loves me? (3) How could I get his picture? (4) It when walking along the street a boy speaks to you whom you do not know should you answer him? BLUE EYES. (1) No. (2) If he loved you, dear, he would write. (3) Don't try. (4) No.
GREENSFORK, IND. j
The Red Cross meeting was held at the Red Cross rooms in the K. of P. hall Tuesday afternoon with an attendance of about fifty women..... Elder E. W. Harland and daughters, Bertha, Llda and Mary of Conners-
Allen and family. .. .Richard Conway attended the funeral of an. uncle in Daleville, Indiana, Saturday. .. .Theodore Sells of Hagerstown, spent Sunday with Mrs. Daisy Kneizle and mother, Mrs. Mary Conway... Mr. and Mrs. Dick Conway and family spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. John Forest Miss Cora Deeter of Hagerstown, came Tuesday evening to spend a few days with Mr. and Mrs. Ray Deeter Miss Mable Breen of Dublin and Mis3 Margaret Breen sj?nt Tuesday afternoon with Mrs. Lester Nicholson and Miss Edna Altic. .. .Mrs. Robie Hobbs who was seriously hurt in Richmond, was able to be brought home Sunday Floyd Dimit and Miss Eisel Lundy were married at the parsonage at
Williamsburg by the Rev. Lee Chamness Sunday evening. .. .Mr. and Mrs. Ed Allen and son Howard, spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Allen.
Revelations of a Wife
BY
ADEL
GARRISON
my brain. "If you had married Jack, you would never had to meet any of these problems, which so complicate your life with Dicky. Jack would never
have urged you to do anything you did not approve, like smoking a cigarette. ; He would have kept you from meeting women of the type you must entertain tonight. He would have thought you perfect in every way, where Dicky seems to want to break your prejudices and ideas at every turn." " Memories of the past came rushing over me, memories, most of them connected with Jack's unvarying kindness to my mother and myself. The son of a distant cousin, he had been adopted in his orphaned babyhood by my mother's sister. We had been brought up to gether. All our childish joys and sorrows were shared, and after Jack grew up it was to my mother and my
self he brought all his triumphs and disappointments. No brother and sister could have been closer in affection. The fact that we were not related except so distantly added just the necessary filling to make our association a most' interesting one to both of us. Jack was the only man of any consequence in my life, -as I was certain I was the only woman in his. Then had come his journey to the wilds of South America, where he could neither receive mail nor get any message out for so long. And I, utterly forgetting almost his very existence, had met Dicky and married him during Jack's absence. With a little start, I remembered that just a week from today he would
be home again, expecting to greet me
as of old. The letter from him was in my desk now, the letter which had
occasioned a quarrel between Dicky
and myself. I felt a sudden sense of
guilt. For my mother s sake, if not for
Jack's, I should have waited for his
homecoming and approval before I
married Dicky.
A FLOOD OF MEMORIES (Concluded) I looked around my room, and woman-like decided that I would get out my best things to display before the eyes of the women, who of course would lay their wraps on my bed. One of my most cherished wedding presents was a beautifully embroidered bedspread and set of pillow case3 and sheets, the gift of a semi-invalid friend whose lonely leisure hours were brightened by her skill in embroidery. I had another set which I had embroidered myself, but which was much less beautiful. This I decided to put upon the bed in Dicky's room, reserving the exquisite gift fo my own bed. I reasoned that the men whom Dicky might take to his room would never notice anything, while women would be both more critical and more appreciative. A cedar chest, one of the few extravagances of my life before I met Dicky, stood under my window; I raised the lid and took from the chest the bed linen I treasured so carefully. The set of napkins and the centrepiece and , doilies which I intended to use upon the table, lay next below. As I lilted them out I saw a queerly figured square of silk
Train Your Hair As An Actress Does
which Jack had once brought my mother from India. I laid down the linen and picked up the oriental fabric, my hands trembling. The sight of it brought, the mem
ory of my mother to me with overwhelming force. How precious this gift had been to her, and how she treasured it! It had never been a secret to me that my mother's dearest wish had been to see me Jack's wife before she left me forever. I knew that her. last years had been shadowed by the knowledge that neither Jack nor I had any other feeling for each other than that of the close friendship, almost relationship, in which we had been reared. I had always been glad that Jack had never wanted to marry me. I did not love him, but I liked him so well that I knew in my heart I never could have resisted the pressure of my mother's wishes and his combined. A sinister little thought crept into
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H oixseKoId Hint
MENU HINT Breakfast Stewed Figs. Corn Flakes with Top Milk. - Stale Bread Pancakes. Home-made Orange Marmalade. Coffee. Luncheon. Sliced Salmon Loaf (Left over from night before.) Mashed Potato Croquets (leftover potatoes) fried in Nut Margarine. Cucumber Relish Home-made Bread. Buttermilk. Dinner. . Spring Lamb Roast .-Browned Potatoes and Gravy. Currant Jelly (home-made). Peas in White Sauce. Apple and Celery Salad. Molasses Wafers. Hot Tea. Graham Bread and Butter. CORN BREAD MUSH Save all leftovers and scraps of corn
bread. Dry out in warm oven, roll fine with rolling pin, add tq boiling salted water instead of corn meal, with a few tablespoons of white flour. Mold as usual. Fry in hot lard or oil. The nutty flavor is preferable to the usual corn meal mush. QUINCE JAM Wash, pare and core quinces. Put parings on to cook. Cut pulp into small pieces and put to cook in separate kettle. When soft, drain off juice. To the juice add three-fourths as much sugar by measure. While your quinces were cooking, part tart apples and slive thin. Put on juice and sugar to cook as for jelly,
"BIBLE STUDY" SUBJECT
"Bible Study" was the subject of an address made by Professor W. O. Mendenhall of Earlham College, Tuesday evening after the dinner given at the Y. M. C. A. by the Hi-Y club. Thirty boys were present. Within a ' few days bible study classes for the winter's work will be organized.
Mesa Verde National Park, Colorado, can boast of the ruins of a building which, scientists have proved, is more than 1,000 years old.
No class of people devotes as much ; time to beauty as do actresses, and no j
class must uu muie taiciui w iciam and develop their charms. Inquiry de
velops the information that in hairj care they find it dangerous to sham-1
poo with any makeshift hair cleanser. The majority say that to have the best hair wash and scalp stimulator at a cost of about three cents, one need only get a package of canthrox from
your druggist; dissolve a teaspoonful in a cup of hot water and your sham-: poo is ready. This makes enough ! shampoo liquid to apply it to ail the hair instead of just the top of the ; head. After its use the hair dries !
rapidly, with uniform color. Dandruff, excess oil and dirt are quickly dissolved and entirely disappear when you rinse the hair. After this your hair will be so fluffy that it will look much heavier than it is. Its lustre and softness will also delight you, while the stimulated scalp gains the health which insures hair growth.
FIRST AID ON FIRING LINE The American Ambulance Units risking: their lives "Somewhere in France" to gather In the wounded sre
"first Aid Soldiers." Their duty is to save, not to fight. The fight la never too hot for them to gro In after the wounded fighting men. to get them to the field or base hospital. They have learned the value of "First Aid." When they re
turn they will be apostles of First Aid Preparedness In every home in time of peace as well as war. Every home should have a simple external antiseptic and healing- first aid like Denver Mud on hand at all times ready for instant use. For open wounds, cuts, bruises, boils, abscesses and poison Insect, bites, it prevents danger of Infection, removes the Inflammation and assists nature to heal the affected part and restore It to normal, healthy condition. Gives quick relief for Rheumatism, Pneumonia, Chest Cblds and Tonsillitis. Large size caffs 26c at all drug stores.
The house of commons consists of 670 members 465 for England, 30 for Wales, 72 for Scotland and 103 for Ireland.
OUR GLASSES Are Reasonable in Price. Your Sight Is Priceless. Dr. Grosvenor, Oculist City Light Bldg., 32 South 8th St.
but add the sliced apples and cook until It will set same as jelly. Turn into glasses and turn melted - paraffin in top; when cool it will form a cake and completely seal the jam. The pulp of the quinces may be put with sweet apples for sauce or combined with cranberries or pears or any favorite method. Part of the juice may be made into plain jell if desired, but the jam is the most delicious way to use quinces, as it has such a delicate flavor and is not so strong of qsrince as to be disagreeable to the most particular. Allot the quince is conserved by using the pulp in any desired way, making It not only pleasing to the taste, but economical as well. HOOKS AND TAPE PUT STOP TO NOISY SHADE The flapping of the window shade, when the sash is raised and the shade lowered," is a serious annoyance to
nervous people, who are generally
light sleepers. If the shade Is raised the light may waken one too early,
(Beautiful Hair Tinting Nothlnjj to robs a woman of her Cood looks and attractiveness as gray, streaked or faded hair. Aad there Is SO l&ore reason or sen
in tolerating nsattraotlve balr than there Is in wearing unbecoming eowns. The one hair tain that stands supreme Is "Brownstone." It Is simple and eay to use. No mixing. Just eonb or brush It Into your hair. It can not be detected, will not rub or waxh off. acts
Instantly. nJ 1 absolutely harmless. "Brownatone" will give any shade destrad from light golden brown to black. Xour drugclst sells Brownatone' vr wm get It for you. A sample and a booklet will be mailed you upon receipt of 10 cents, and your orders will be filled direct from our labBratorlM if yon prefer. Mention shade desired. Two sizes 5c and $1J5. Insist on Brownatone" at your hair Greaser's. Prepared by tie Kenton Pharmacol Co., 460 Coppln 'Bids'., Covtnfton, Ky. Sold and guaranteed in by and ottsr leading dealer.
yet ventilation is absolutely necessary to health. . - ; i .- The way to prevent the flapping .is very simple. Screw two little brass cup hooks, one on each sie of the window frame, opposite each other about a foot from the silL At night tie a broad tape across the open window, from one hoop to the other, as sailors say, "taut." Screw a third hoot In the holding below the silL.-exactly in the center. , i-"""" - Pull down the snade over the tape, andtie .the cord to the lower hook. The shade will be held firmly In place and a peaceful night's Bleep i3 assured.
One million automobiles were In use in the United States on November 1. 1913, more than a quarters of a million of which had been sold in the previous twelve months.
4 -Mi ! "!'$ C- '
Tells How to Stop , Bad Cough
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BnrpilataaT results fram thla bom-
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Pallad lum' Want Ads Pay.
"jfMlTtL
Womeini
Are Told How to Find Relief from Pain. Nashua, 1ST. II. "I am nineteen years old and eTery month for two years I had such pains that I would often faint and hare to leave school. I had such pain I did not know what to do with myself and tried so many remedies that were of no use. I read about Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetablo
Compound in the newspapers and decided to try it, and that is how I found relief from
pain and feel so much better than I used to, "When I hear of any girl suffering
as I did I tell them how Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound helped me." Delxna Maktix, 29 Bowers Street, Nashua, N. IL
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, made from native roots and herbs, contains no narcotic or harmful drugs, and is, therefore,
THE PERFECTLY SAFE REMEDY
WMA 1. PINKH
77
T
1 'H' MIf you have a severe couch or chest cold accompanied with soreness, throat tickle, hoarseness, or difficult breathing, or if your child wakes up during tho xucrht with croup and vou want quick help, just try this pleasant tasting home-made cough remedy. Any drtur-f-ist can supply you with 2 ounces of anex (60 cents worth). Pour this into a pint bottle and fill the bottle with plain granulated sugar syrup. Thus prepared, you have a pint of really remarkable cough remedy one that eaa be depended upon to give quick and laatinc relief at all times. You can feel this take hold of a coupli in a way that means business. Itt loosens and . raises the phlegm, stops throat tickle and soot&es and heals the irritated membranes that line tha throat and bronchial tubes with such promptness, ease and certainty that ife Is really astonishing. Pinex is a special and highly concen-4 trated compound of genuine Norway pine extract, and is noted for its speed in overcoming severe coughs, throat and chest colds. Its millions of enthusiastic users have made it famous the world, over. . There are many worthless imitations of this noted mixture. To avoid disappointment, ask for "2 ounces of Pinex" with full directions and don't accept anything else. A guarantee of absolute satisfaction or money promptly refunded, goes with this preparation. The Pinex Co., Ft Wayne, Ind.
CHIROPRACTIC Your Spine is An Index to Your .Health. NERVES The Key to Health. The Architects of Form. The Secret of Beauty. G. C. WILCOXEN, D. C. (Doctor of Chiropractic) S5 South 11th. Phone 1603. Richmond, Ind.
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TABLE COMPOUN:
Neuralgia Headaches After shopping or after a hard day are quickly relieved with Sloan 'a Liniment. So easy to apply, no rubbing, and so promptly effective. Cleaner and more convenient than mussy plasters and ointments. It does not stain the skin, or clog the pores. Every home should have a bottle handy for sprains, strains, lame back, rheumatic pains and stiff, sore muscles and joints. - Generous sized bottles at all druggists. 25c. 50c. $1.00.
LYDIA E.PINKHAM MEDICINE CO. LYNN. MASS.
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