Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 43, Number 25, 11 December 1917 — Page 5

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. TUESDAY, DEC. 11, 1917.

PAGE FIVE

Y. W. C. A. WAR WORK PLANS DISCUSSED

Y. W. C. A. war work was diecusssd Sunday afternoon by Miss Blanche Crosby, of Indianapolis, at the Commercial club rooms. Miss Crosby also talked to women who were at work at the Red Cross rooms. The meeting was to have been held at the St. Paul's Parish hou but because of lack of fuel the change was made. The proceeds from the musical ev travanganza "Fi Fi" at the- "A'ashington Monday and Tuesday evanings will go toward Y. W. C. A. war relief work. Secretary Schwan said Monday the Y. M. C. A. war fund has been oversubscribed and the money was needed by the Y. W. C. A.

Heart and Home Problems

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LYNN, IND.

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Roy Thomas who has been In Philadelphia, is visiting his mother, Mrs. Jennie Thomas and sister Mrs. A. J. Miller. . . .The funeral of Nelson Spencer which was to have been held Sunday wa3 postponed until Monday afternoon on account of the drifted condition of the roads caused by the recent blizzard. .. .The teachers of Washington township attended a joint institute at Winchester Saturday Mell Wogoman of Hagerstown spent Sunday here with friends Miss Elizabeth Pesg entertained girl friends from Boston, Ind., Saturday and Sunday. . . . Miss Ellen Nichols has resigned her position as teacher of the sixth grade and domestic science. The vacancy will be filled by Miss Golda Martin of Muncie. . . .The auto school hack was unable to get to school Monday through the snow drifts Frank Hill who has been spending some time with his parents Mr. and Mrs. S. V. IU11 left Saturday for Portland. Me., where he is with the coast artillery. Mrs. Gus Cerlach visited in Farmland with relatives Saturday.

Dear Mrs. ThomDson: I am a Kirl

twenty years old and I have been go

ing with a young man for several months. Lately he and I have quarreled when we have been together and it has really been my fault because I have objected to his going

with a certain other girl. He came to see me last night and he seemed a little impatient about my attitude, but he asked me to the picture theatre with him next week. I am afraid that I , will lose his friendship because of the way I have acted. He has been nice about it, but I feel a change in his attitude toward me. What shall I do?

. BETTY.

Fear is the greatest handicap you can have. If you are afraid you will lose a friendship, you very likely will. Your friend will feel your lack of confidence. It was a mistake to be disagreeable about the other girl, but the fact that you were should not cause you to worry now. All of us ulake mistakes often, but we shouldn't let them bother us they are a blessing if we profit by them. , The boy likes you or he would have given you up before now. The very fact that he has asked you to go to the theatre with him shows that he is still willing to be friends. It is hard, of course, to be free from jealousy, but it is something you must work for. No one can take away from you what you rightfully deserve. If you are just as pleasing as you know how to be and try to be a girl of character you need have no regrets

1 .

even if you lose the boy other nice things will come to you. Dear Mrs. Thompson: (1) I have a boy friend who is a soldier and I think very much of him. He said he would write t me. He has been gone since August and I have only received two letters and I have written five to him. D you think he does not want to write to me any more? (2) One of his boy friends wants to go with me. Do you think it is right for me to go with him since the other does not write? WORRIED HEART. (1) He is probably too busy to write. I wouldn't feel hurt if I were you. Send him a card at Christmas time and if he answers forgive him for his neglect. (2) It is perfectly all right to go with other boys unless you are engaged. Dear Mrs. Thompson: (1) What would be a nice Christmas present for a boy? (2) If a boy of eighteen goes with a girl of the same age steady and doesn't go with any other girls, do you think he cares for her? (3) Are a boy and a girl of eighteen too young to go to a city to a show by themselves? DOUBTFUL. (1) It is not necessary for a girl to give a boy a Christmas present

unless she is engaged to him. In case she does give him a present, however, it should be something small a book for instance. (2) He probably- cares for her at the time, but usually the love of a boy of eighteen is not lasting. (3) Yes, I think they are. Dear Mrs. Thompson: How often should a girl wash her hair. I have

BEAUTIFUL EYES

l I Oil L(1U UMftC IUUI 1 eyes beautiful by applying

LASH-BR0W-1NE

nirrtitlv It malcM the eve-

,d laxariant. bucMMfully oH

ar' .price soc. Kecommenaea and sold by Ttaistlcthvrnlte'n Kit, tlnrn.

NO GOOD can possibly come from wearing cheap glasses INJURY WILL Come and let us explain the difference. DR. GROSVENOR, Oculist City Light Bldg. 32 So. 8th.

oily hair. For a week after I wash it it looks all right, but after that it is not fluffy. Is once every two weeks too often to wash It? i GERTRUDE M. T. It Is all right to wash the hair every two weeks, but it is better to wait

Cures Colds In Mexico LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE tablets remove the cause. E. W. GROVE'S signature on box. 30c.

Danger Ahead ! For Sufferers of Impure, Polluted Blood whatever the cause take

Cleanses, invigorates, restores nat oral functions. For fifty years thi moCt famous of blood remedies.

Try it

All drug stores.

Palladium Want Ads Pay.

three week or a month. The oftener you wash your hair the, oftener it will need it. I think you will find that

after your hair reaches a certain stage of olliness. if you will not wash it. it will become fluffy again.

FILMS

FURS

Special Display of Xmas Furs 0 in all the leading styles and colors. Poiret, Kamschatka. Taupe, Pearl Grey Fox and Wolf Sets, Mole Sets, Natural Wolverine, Persian Paw, Black Fox, Black Wolf, Hudson Seal and Chinchilla. Also a fine assortment of skins to select from. I sell "Axsalia Maid" registered furs the highest grade on the market. E. F. DENNIS, furrier

300 S. 13th St.

Phone 1946.

H ousefiold HintsS -

MENU HINT Breakfast Tokay Graphs Poached Egga Waffles of Rice and Corn Flour Honey Ccffee or Cocoa Luncheon Cream cf Celery Sorp Currant Jelly Oatme.il Wafers Tapioca Fuddmg Dinner Pf Stew Vegetable Dinner BCfton Brown Erepri Peanut Butter Custard Pic Cocoa

beat five minutes hour in two pans.

and bake oae-half

ENTIRELY WHEATLCSS

FOR AN

DAY

For breakfast there are cereals, cut or rolled oats, cut" or rolled barley, rice and the ready-to-use cereals; for luncheon a corn bread or ccrn pone; for dinner, rice and corn' muffins a luncheon and corn bread at night. If a tnl?k soup Is planned, Use pea flour, which is better for scup; or, if tt white cream soup, thicken with coru rtarclf. Corn Pone Mix with co'd w-iter into a soft dough, one pint white "rn msal. one-half teaspoon salt, one-half tablespoon melted shortening. T.told into oval cakes with hand and b?k? in very hot oven In well greased pan Should be l!e;ht brown. To be eaten hot. Jolly Boys Pour boiling water over cornmeal (either white or yeliow meal) and one-half teaspoon salt; do not have it too soft, but verv stiff, so it will drop from a spoon on hot griddle. Flatten each spoonful out with a cake turner and bake as pancakes. Takes longer to fry than mush. Corn Cake One tea.:up powdered rugar, one quart milk, two oun:es shortening, salt. Put mixture in a double boiler until scalding hot, mix into It as much commeal as will make It like thick mush, beat very hard and cool. Beat two eggs and add when mixture is lukewarm. Add one yeist cake (dissolved) and beat like mad. An old colored auntir cor-k always said her "corn food" was good 'cause she "always beat corn (ike she was mad " Set in a pan with p'pe in center, very well greased, or on earthern dish and put pipe in center. It should be light in four hours; then take two hours. Serve hot by turnip? upside down on hot plate, slice ind ent hot. Corn and Rice Cakes T'vo cups white corn meal, one cup boiled rice,

one teaspoonful salt, one e?R. two and one-quarter cups milk, two tablespoons melted shortening, three teaspoons

baking powder. Beat thorougnly.

Bake in muffin pans twenty u:inutes.

..Johnny Cake Four cups white

meal, one teaspoon salt, two table epoons molasses, three cups butter milk, two teaspoons soda, one egg

THE TABLE Sou"- Mat Take one po-md sliced cold boiled meat (any kind of leftover meat). Take two medium sized onion?, one teaspoon inixr-d pickle, spice tied in bag, ptppep and salt to

taste, three tablespoons vinegar. Boil

half an hour. Brown two tablespoons flour, thicken and pervf. A slice of lemon adds to the flavor Serve with this potatoes boiled in their jackets. This is a very tasty ?nd eonomieai dish

Squash Cakes One f?g, one pint j milk, one and one-half cups squash. I boiled and strained, enough to make ! batter. Bake on griddle. . Use fresh! honey or maple syrup. ! Cocoa Two and one-hilf cup3 j sugar, one cup cocoa, 'wo and one-j half pints water. Let come to a boil and pour iu. quart jar. , When ready j to serve tak one tablespoon of this to each cup of milk, let come to a boil ' and serve hot. Delicious ind keeps j well. One of the neglected food? rich hi I vitamins is "Hominy Grits." Our ancestors ate them because thny were j good to the palate and thay "satisfled." We forgot them along with i many, other delicious and nourishing i dishes. Now, thanks to Mr. Hoover, i wfi have rprlismvprprt thu fieatost end I

most economical of all balanced foods "old King Corn."

WILLIAMSBURG

On next Wednesday night December 12, the Progressive Ladies Aid of the M. E. church of this place will give a musical entertainment and oy.-ter supper Oddison Etiggal of Pitts burgh atterded the funeral of his brother, Henry Stlggal of this place Thursday Anna Piehe spent the week-end with Miss Ural Reynolds of Fountain City Mr. and Mrs. Frank Oler have teturned from a week's visit with their daughter, Mrs. Hazel Wood ....Mr and Mrs. George Armstrong have as their week-end guests Mrs. Shook and daughter of Bunen, Ind . . . Mrs. F. C. Bell and daughter, Elizabeth were Richmond shoppers Friday afternoon.

Make Your Own Cough

Zyrup ana bave Money

Better than the ready-mad i kind. aU7 prepared at home.

The finest couch syrup that monev can buy, costing only about one-fifth as much as ready-made preparations, can easily be made up at home. The way it takes hold and conquers distressing couch s, throat and chest colds will rually make you enthusiastic about it. Any druzjrist can supply you with 2'i ounces of Pinex (60 cents worth). J'our this into a pint bottle and fill the bottle with plain cranulated sujar nyrup. Shake thoroughly and it is ready for uso.' The total cost is about i.) cents and jrives you a full pint a family supply of a most effectual, plensant tuxting remedy. It keeps perfectly. It's truly astonishing how quickly it sets, penetrating through every air paBaatre of the throat and lungs loosens and raises tho phlegm, soothes and heals the inflamed or nwollen throat memItranes, and pradufflly but surely the annoying1 throat tickle and dreaded oouuh will disappear entirely. Kothinsr better for bronchitis, spasmodic croup, whooping cough or bronchial asthma. Pinex is a special and highly concentrated compound of genuine Korway pino extract, and is known the world ever for its prompt healing effect on the throat membranes. Avoid disappointment by asking your druggist for -Va ounces of I'inex" with full directions and don't accept anything else. A guarantee of absolute satisfaction or money promptly refunded, poes with this preparation. The Pinex Co., PL Wayne, Ind.

Penny Pinching Not Always True Economy I have learned that the intelligent housewife the woman schooled in really scientific domestic economy no longer throws away a nickel to save a penny. A good way to illustrate this point would be through comparison of baking powders. Experience has taught me and millions of other women that it doesn't pay to buy cheap baking powders. They cost a few cents less, but in the long run they are decidedly the most expensive. Because of the low grade materials employed in their manufacture they cause many bake day failures and great loss of expensive ingredients. The housewife throws out, in wasted materials many times the amount caved on the cost of the baking powder. This is not economy, but extravagance, , True economy- in baking powder demands the highest quality at the lowest price. Only baking powders that meet these demands should be used. Only baking powder that is made of the highest class ingredients so perfectly proportioned that it not only produces maximum leavening power but also preserves it. Besides, the baking powder that meets the modern demand for economy should be economical in use full strength economical in cost secured at a moderate price. The housewife should be able to effect a saving when buying and another saving whea using and she should save materials it is used with. That is economy in its highest form. Complete economy. The only kind of economy the housewife should attempt. I have proved positively by exhaustive experiments and comparative tests that Calumet Baking Powder is best suited to these savings. It possesses the surety, the purity and goodness that make constant employment of utmost baking economy possible.

Note. Miss Costello is already well known to most of the ladies of our city. Site is of the Domestic Science Branch of the University of Chicago, a graduate of Lewis Institute, Supervisor of Domestic Science in Public Schools, Special Lecturer on Domestic Arts and Economy, Special Lecturer to the Women's Clubs. We are publishing a series cf Iter most important articles.

Christmas As Usual Times and conditions have changed, so make this a sane Christmas. GIVE USEFUL PRESENTS ELECTRICAL GIFT HINTS FOR "HER" OR "HIM"

Lighting Fixtures Toaster Stoves Give Something Electrical.

Portable Lamps Wanning Pads-

Radiant Heaters Irons

Visitors Always Wellcome here.

CRANE ELECTRIC CO.

Lighting Specialists.

Sole Agents Edison Mazda Lamps.

Phone 106L

must learn not

neglect their health

now women are Kestored to Health

Spartanburg. S.C. "For nine yeara I suffered from backache, weakness, and irregularities so I could hardly do my work. I tried many remedies but found no permanent relief. After taking Lydia E. Finkham's Vegetable Compound I felt a great change for the better and am now well and strong 60 I have no trouble in doing my work. I hope every user of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound will get as great relief as I did from its use." Mrs. S. D. McAbee, 122 Dewey Ave., Spartanburg, S. C. Chicago, 111. "For about two years I suffered from a female trouble so I was unable to walk or do any of my own work. I read about Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound in the newspapers and determined to try it. It brought almost immediate relief. Sly weakness has entirely disappeared and I

never had better health. I weigh 165 pounds

money E.rink-

r eeetablo Comoound." Mrs. Jon.

O'Bkyax, 1755 Newport Ave., Chicago, IU.

YOU CAN RELY UPON

and am as strong as a man. I think n is well spent which purchases Lydia E.; barn's Vegetable Compound." Mrs.

LYDIAE

VEGETABLE COM

P0UMED

It's YOUNot US 'Tis you who are buying the Phonograph

We simply sell phonographs-Brunswick Phonographs. We say that we have the best phonograph values in Richmond but our say so doesn't prove anything. That's why we urge you to go to every other phonograph house in the city, find out what they have to offer and then come to Brunswick

All Phonographs In One"

Two Popular Models We've Many More To Show You

it

Main Street.

Corner Ninth,

iB'tiiilTifuT JflT1

m

F 1 II 1 1 i i -f 1 J 111

a.

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MODEL 95 Sold on easv monthly payments. Price 95

siiif yk wn ii mini mm-, 5 -?: Pill Mr

MODEL 130 A Richmond Favorite--Small payments. Price $130