Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 42, Number 324, 26 November 1917 — Page 5

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, MONDAY, NOV. 26, 1917.

PAGE FIVE

STRAWBERRIES ON EXHIBITION AT FOUNTAIN CITY Mien Rich Exhibits Full Red Berries ; Potatoes and Corn Also Shown.

FOUNTAIN CITY. Ind., Nov. 26.

Isaac McClerny, manager on the Will-

lam Cooper farm, has been working in

the campaign for seed selection. His

exhibit at the local creamery station

shows yellow and white corn in 'regular 22 and 24 rows, full kernalley tops

and butts, and nature-dried nubbins

The average of the fields selected went from 60 to 75 bushels to the

icre. A number of farmers are co

operating In the seed-selection cam paign in this section.

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Allen Rich, the real estate man, has

boxes of strawberries in the same exhibit, showing what can be done by cultivation. The strawberries are in blossom, some show white fruit, and others the full' red berries. He has

60 stands of bees and his honey has

the real clover flavor.

The Ehow of Modoc potatoes, 40

bushels of sound, plump well-dried esculents, is another side line indexing that it pays to select good seed. The recent instructions from the department of agriculture that seed potatoes have certain qualities, are being used in this seed selection campaign In Fountain City. High school boys and girls are taking interest in corn selection. . Some joker cartoonist, "slipped one over" on the postmaster, Saturday, while he was busy, by nailing a carton in colors Inside the office and near the door. It is entitled "Lafe Harrison and the Xraas Rush," and shows the postmaster falling exhausted among the packages labeled for the soldier boys. Lafe says he will let the cartoon stand where it is, and then packages may be posted early.

MENU HINT Breakfast Oatmeal with Dates Corn Meal Muffins , Coffee, Millk for Children Dinner, Lamb Stew with Vegetables Rye Bread

Grape Juice Corn Starch Pudding

Tea Supper

Creamed Oysters on leftover Muffins cut in half and Toasted Jello Cocoa THE TABLE Meatless Soup (will serve eight people) Soak one pound of lima beans over night, in the morning put on stove to boil with fresh water; add one large or two small carrots, one small onion, and a few celery tops, and salt to taste. When quite soft put all through colander, add a piece of butter and serve. If too thick add hot water until just right. Meat Substitute One cup peanut butter, one cup constarch, two and one-half cups cold left-over (weak) coffee or coffee substitute, one tea

spoon salt, one-half teaspoon sage. Add cornstarch and seasoning to peanut butter, add coffee a little at a time, stirring until thoroughly blended. Put in double boiler, cook four hours (without stirring) or more until it forms a solid cake. Let cool in dish In which it is cooked. Slice and eat cold, or

dip in beaten egg and fry. White Sausage One pound best beef suet chopped very fine, two cups fiour (sifted), one cup white cornmeal, half teaspoon pepper, one teaspoon each of salt and cinnamon. Mix these ingredients thoroughly (add no moisture). Fill into cases same as sausage ; 1 drop into boiling water and cook four hours. Take from water and brown very little. If no cases

are available, cloth cases may be used; remove cloths before browning or serving. One-third of a yard in length by four inches width, is size cases are to be cut. The above quantity will serve quite a number of meals for four or five persons. Always nice until all is used. Beef Stew Have ready a kettle of boiling water. In another bettle put one large tablespoon sweet lard; when it fries, stir smooth into it a heaping tablespoon of flour; when this fries

up, put in meat, turn over and over in it, but do not let brown. Then pour over it a quart of boiling water and let simmer until tender; as water evaporates add more. Season with salt and pepper and you have a delicious stew. Any of the cheaper cuts of meat are good cooked this way. Boiled Potatoes, Onion Sauce One quart potatoes, one tablespoon drippings, one cup chopped onion, one cup milk, quarter teaspoon salt, one tablespoon chopped parsley. Wash and

pare potatoes, cut into quarters and lengthwise; boil twenty-five minutes or until tender;-drain, dust with salt and shake. Put on platter, cover with onion sauce, sprinkle with chopped parsley and dust with paprika. Onion Sauce Put drippings in sauce

pan, add chopped onion, fry until light yellow and tender; shake pan and stir all the time; add milk and tablespoon

flour stirred with a little milk to thickend like cream. Add salt and dash of pepper. Mock Plum Pudding (which cannot

be told from the real plum pudding) 1 To one cup raw grated carrots add one

cup raw grated potatoes, one cup sugar (granulated), one cup sifted flour with two teaspoons spice, one teaspoon soda, one small teaspoon salt. Stir in one-half pound raisins and one-half pound raisins and onehalf pound currants, floured. Stem three hours in one-pound coffee cans. Serve with any sauce. This recipe wille serve twelve persons. Ginger Drop Cakes One cup sorghum, one-half cup boiling water, two and one-quarter cups flour, one teaspoon salt, - one-half cup chopped raisins, four tablespoons melted shortening. Put sorghum in bowl, add boiling water, then dry in gredients sifted together; then the raisins and short

ening. inea greased muffin pans half full and bake twenty minutes in moderate oven.

and boats. There are two boat loads, one carrying twelve hundred, the other three hundred. The train is made up t forty cattle cars. The white men are brought in nine of these cars, the remaining number are filled with colored men. Then there are the auto trucks, automobiles and "Fords" full. Mr. Sullivan left here with a number of otner carpenters for work on the camp buildings. The attendance at the Red Cross has increased wonderfully in the last few meetings, here-to-fore there was an average of eight attending, while there have been eighteen and twenty present at recent meetings. .. .Mrs. William Taylor spent several day6 with friends and relatives at Indianapolis the first of the week. .... .Mrs. Christina Oler and children of Richmond were guests the first of the week of Mrs. Daisy O. King. ...The

Young People's Classes of the Friends church met for a social time at the home of Mr. and Mrs. William Lamott

Friday evening. A large number were present and a pleasant time enjoyed.

About $13,000,000 of the total estimated cost of $56,000,000 has been spent to date on the Welland ship canal. The work has been suspended on account of the war.

Heart and Home Problems

CENTERVILLE, IND.

A very interesting letter was received from John Sullivan by his wife stating that there were between eight and ten thousand men at work on the Government buildings for the new camp located a short distance from Jacksonville, Fla. "It is a great sight early in the morning to see the men gathering for work, coming in by auto trucks, trains

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Dear Mrs. Thompson: I am one of the. most abused girls I know. I am sixteen years old and I have had so much trouble in school that I quit and am working for a family here in the

city. I live at home and I have to get up at five o'clock and get ready and get my own breakfast before leaving to go to work. I get to work at six and have to get breakfast where I work and then after the dishes are done I have the housework to do till time for dinner. I have all of the work of a big

house and it near-1 ly drives me wild. I have half a no-

tiontjon to quit it all and go back home to live and stand the abuse I get there. I am not allowed to have any gentlemen callers and I don't get a chance to go out anywhere now. I couldn't have men call on me at home, but I could go out once in a while and meet boys who like me. Now my life is just continual work and my mother tells me it is useless to stick it out, that I better come home and have things easier. Do you think I should do it? SWEET SIXTEEN. Yes, I think you should follow your mother's advice. You are very young to be working out and working so hard when you don't have to. If you are at home you will at least have your mother's care and have the comforts of the home. It is not right for you to want young mn to call on you. You are much too young for that. Be content to have good times with boys and girls your own agp, but do not allow young men to call on you as the older young ladies do. You should not meet boys out on the street either, or away from home. It ia that sort of a practice that may

rum your lite. You are young yet and have your whole life before you and if you live right and take care of your morals and habits you will find

life as a young woman much more bright and purposeful. Dear Mrs. Thompson: I have a black fur coat thatr I have worn two seasons and it is beginning to wear

out in places. Do you think it can be fixed, and how? BABY DOLL. Yes, it probably can be repaired by a furrier. Take It to the place you bought it and ask them how much it would cost to have it put in good shape. If they still have the same kind of fur or can get it, they can repair your coat so that it will not show the alterations and then it will be serviceable for some time yet.

To Avoid Rough, Coarse, Chapped, Blotchy Skin

By mere waste, caused by coins rubbing one against another, the civilized world loses one ton and a quarter of gold and eighty-five tons of silver annually.

?ay; Cr

THere's no better food on a winterday than

oodwarm, crisp

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Pennsylvania Lines Notice of Change of Time, Effective Sunday, Nov. 25th, 1917. Train now leaving for Chicago at 2:00 a. m. will leave at 1:45 a. m. daily. The Southland (through train to Florida) will leave at 5:20 a. m. instead of 4:40 a. m. daily. The train

now arriving at 12:10 Noon from New

York will become a through train from

Boston and New "ork and arrive at

1:35 p. m. going through to St, Louis, daily. East bound this train for New York and Boston will leave at 9:30 a. m., daily. The Commercial Express No. 26 for Pittsburgh and New York at S:45 p. m. will leave at 8:50 p. m. daily. The Louisville and Madison, Ind., train now leaving at 1:35 p. m. will leave at 3:25 p. m. daily except Sunday. Tna Pittsburgh Express at 12:10 a. m. will be routed via Piqua and Urbana instead of via Dayton and Xenia. Other trains as at present. C. vV. ELMER, Passenger and Ticket Agent, Richmond, Ind., Nov. 21st, 1917.

Mast kln i en air a constant grooming at this season to keen them from becoming: unduly rcU blotchy, coarse, rough or harsh, or If such condition h developed, to overcome It- In such cases it is particularly inadvisable to keep piling on cosmetics which dog the pores and make the

complexion worse man ever. It's a lot mure sensible to use ordinary mercoliaed wax, which literally absorbs a spoiled complexion. Apply the wax, lik cold cream, before retiring. Next morning. In w-hlnK It off. youTl wash away fine, flour-like particles of the unsightlj cuticle. Repeat tor a week or more and you'll have an entirely new akin oft white, spotless and beautiful as a child a One ounce ef mercolixed wax, procurabl at any dmcEisf a, is all you'll need. , Adv.

"Whore did He Iceep your Coffee lost zzf gilt? Dirt and dust are never found in GoIdsnSun Coffee In our sunlit factories we keep it clean -pack it clean and deliver it clean in air-tightpackagesthrough your grocer. We even take out the chaff that makes ordinary coffee muddy and bitter. Try Golden Sun. Sold only by grocers.

The WooUon Spice Co. Toledo, Ohio

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"America's Most Popular Singer" Coliseum Wednesday MgM, Dec. 5

Prices: $1, $1.50, $2.

Seats on sale at Fulghum's Victrola Shop next Wednesday.

Just received another supply of ARMY CAMP PILLOWS Inflated with air weight 7-oz. Price $2.00. A. G. LUKEN & CO.

630 Main St.

Phone 1213

H. C. HASEME1ER CO.

and

ale This Week

Suit

All Reduced. None Held Back

SHOES

THANKSGIVING

To be Correctly, Comfortably, Economically and Attractively "Shod" is indeed a thing for which any woman should be thankful. CORRECTLY STYLED There is originality in these dainty Bhoea. There Is exclusiveness an Individuality of design that makes them different from others. COMFORTABLY FITTED Dorothy Dodd 'Shoes are designed to fit comfortably and give luxurious ease to all kinds of feet. There is a large variety from which to select. ECONOMICALLY PRODUCED They are always priced within the limits of every woman's purse. You can be certain of obtaining dollar-for-dollar value. ATTRACTIVELY EXHIBITED At our store this week. It Is a pleasure to shop for Dorothy Dodd Shoes. We delight to show them.

Sold Exclusively in Richmond by

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Starr Phonograph

Xmas Club

Join Now!

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It's Not Too Late To Join Our Christmas Club! Call to select one of these beautiful instruments- to be delivered to your home Christmas Eve. Join our club now, begin your payments and we'll see that you'll not be disappointed on Christmas day. DON'T FORGET: The Starr has a Singing Throat of Silver Grain Spruce. Plays all makes of records. - Has a scientific tone modifier. Strong, long running, quiet motor. Large turn-table, speed regulator, piano finish, domes instead of noisy casters and many other conveniences. Call tomorrow. You'll be delighted with our special offers and you'll enjoy the music. Styles, prices and terms to suit all. A demonstration entails no obligation. The Starr Piano Co. Tenth and Main. Telephone 1646.

The Store "With --.Only'-One. Price

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