Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 43, Number 56, 16 January 1918 — Page 5

11

THE RICHMOND P ALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. WEDNESDAY, JAN. 16, 1918. PAGE FIVE

'FOUR OF OLDEST

RESIDENTS OF EATON ARE DEAD

EATON, Jan. 16. Four of the oldest esident of Eaton have died within the tst four days. They ranged in age rcra 53 to 89. Funeral services for Mrs. Mary Ann Mitchell, S9, who died Sunday night j the home of her son-in-law, J. E. 3ruce, were held Wednesday afterloon at the residence, the Rev. T. J.

Mmpion, of the Presbyterian church, officiating. Burial in Mound Hill cem

etery. Mrs. Mitchell leaves no living cildren. She was born in Lewises, a daughter of Francis and Re--tccaa Revell. She had lived in the

bruce .home the last twenty years or

aaaer.

; Funeral services for Mrs. Harriet Vcung, 77, wife of the late Henry H. VOung. who died Friday in the home t Mrs. Susan Rust, where she lived, vere held Monday afternoon in the U.

. cburchtfthe Rev. Aaron Brubaker

ficiatittg. Burial in Mound Hill cenr itery. One daughter. Mrs. Frank Wil

ciuson, Dixon township, and two sons.

saac Young, of Eaton, and Frank

oung, who is in the West, survive.

Chris. Stiles, 74, died Tuesday mornng In the county infirmary, where he

J-iad been an inmate the last ten years, r.l&itXC? OimfttAl fire r i fit tAvrneltln

Bo far as known, he leaves no rela-

ivts. Funeral services for Charley Ack-

fcrman, 53. who cropped dead of heart

Lllsease Thursday in the home of his

istfr, Mrs. John Filbert, were held

Saturday at the residence, the Rev. T. 9. Simpson. of the Presbyterian

.burch. officiating. The body was

placed in the vault in Mound Hill cem-

tery to await burial. Only the eister

kurvives.

WOMEN TOILING AT CAPITAL TO RUSH YOUR NEW LIBERTY BONDS TO YOU

Four in Family Have

The Same Birthday SilELBYVlLLB. Ind., Jan. 16. Jan

uary 11 is an eventful day in the life

bf Clarence Pike, who lives south of

Shelbyville. Thirty-eight years ago bn January 11, Mr. Pike was bom Ifwelve years ago. on the same date, f-lr. Pike became the father of twins, knd last Friday, January 11, a boy Has born.

The Pike lcraily believes it holds be record for birthdays which fall on he same day.

THOUGHTS TO THINK ABOUT You cannot see your own vices If you are blind to other people's virtues. You must praise your neighbor to make progress yourself. Faith gives a man a chance for watching and waiting but

never permits him to be idle;

faith goes and gets while it watches and waits. Your smile and good cheer make others happy; they will send your smiles along. Your good cheer is contagious, an endless chain to give up-lift to thousands. The alphabetical arrangement of advertisements in The Palladium Want Ad columns Is solely for the readers' benefit, it saves their time and makes their search successful. Read the classified page of today's Palladium.

A DAINTY DRESS

FOR MOTHERS GIRL

I -h''hMth -Jim f t i tY-

C Y'- f iiiT L" 01 $A; ' 'Wiw

WASHINGTON, Jan. 13. When you J at Washington your bond would be a

get your crisp, new certificate showing that you've come across and supported L'nole Sam by shelling out your fifty, your hundred or thousand to buy a Liberty bond, remember that if it were not for the women workers in the bureau of engraving and printing

great deal longer getting to you.

In almost every step of the process of the making of the bands the women workers have a hand and their labors are speeding the certificates on the way to the subscribers. The lower photo shows one of the women em-

Above Women counting b6nds in government printing office. Below-Close-up of a folder.

ployed in the bureau gathering up the Liberty bonds and folding them. The work of rushing the bonds for the Liberty loans to completion so that the certificates will be soon in the hands of the subscribers is going on with great speed in the government bureau of printing and engraving at

Washington.

Soon everyone who came across and "planked down" his dollars for Uncle Sam will have tangible evidence of his patriotism in the form of certificates that the government issues. In the upper photo the women workers are shown making the wet count Of the partially completed bonds. The wet count is the third process In the manufacture of the certificates.

Household Hint,-

FOR MEATLESS DAY Sweet Potato Loaf Boil and

the small sweet potatoes, add salt, butter, dash of pepper, with a little sugar. Mix well and form Into oval shape, roll in egg and crumbs and put in greased pan. Bake in oven until browned. Nut Loaf One and one-half cups soft bread crumbs, one tablespoon minced onion, one-half tablespoon poultry seasoning, two tablespoons melted butter, one tablespoon salt, one cup ground peanutB, one egg. Mix together thoroughly, form in loaf, bake about forty-five minutes. Baste with two tablespoons butter in one-half cup boiling water. Serve hot or cold, and makes excellent sandwiches. Home-Made Noodles and Cottage Cheese As cottage cheese is plentiful and cheap, it makes a dandy meal for meatless days. Take one pound flour one beaten egg, pinch of salt and enough water to make a good stiff dough. Knead it well, on breadboard till nice and smooth, then roll it out then and cut it into broad noodles. Cook in boilJns: water about eight minutes, rinse them in three waters (cold). That makes them firm. Melt two tablespoons butter till brown, heat noodles in it, stirring them over fire till good and hot; take off fire and add one-half pound cottage cheese and

j pinch of s

mash ana serve.

The dry

ilt. Stir cheese in evenly

cottage, cheese is cheaper

and better for this dish, but the cream-

mixed may be used also, only you use less butter. Oleomargarine may be substituted for butter. Macaroni can be used in place of noodles. Jungle Stew Soak one cup red kid ney beans over night, then cook in salted water until tender. Add one can tomatoes. Fry medium-sized onion in four tablespoons drippings and add to tomatoes and beans. When mixture is boiling rapidly add one cup raw macaroni and sufficient salt. Cook until macaroni is done and add one tablespoon chili powder or paprika. The latter may be omitted but the stew is improved by its addition. BREADS Brown Bread (no eggs or butter) Two cups sour milk in which dissolve one and one-half teaspoons soda; pour over one cup brown sugar (white will do), add two cups graham flour and one cup white flour 6ifted with onehalf teaspoon salt; add floured raisins. Pour into greased bread pans and bake in moderate oven. This makes two loaves. War Muffins (no eggs, sugar or butter) One cup white flour, one and one-third cups whole wheat, rye, graham or cornmeal, one level teaspoon salt, four level teaspoons baking pow

der, one-quarter cup corn sirup, two tablespoons n.elted shortening (butterine or vegetable), three-quarter cup milk. Sift and mix dry ingredients, add liquids, 'beat well. Bake in quick oven twenty minutes. Makes one dozen light, delicious muffins. The3e muffins also make a good dessert if a few raisins or dates are added to the batter and served with sauce or thickened fruit juice.

Seize Eight Cars For Light Plant HTJNTTNGTON, Ind, Jan. 16. Fifteen oars of coal in all have been confiscated by the coal administration, eight of the number going to the Tuntihgton Light and Fuel Company. Every business in town except the hotels, restaurants and the theatres were closed at 6 o'clock, on order of C. B. Williams, fuel administrator. The theatres were permitted to open because they are not open in the morning. Coal deliveries Monday were made in half-ton lots by dealers, and volunteer teamsters and shovelers, including merchants .'and professional men. Fifty men, detailed, from five factories, started work Monday morning in the Erie yards, and will continue to work there, augmented by more factory workers, until the yards are cleared of drifts, and cars can be moved. More snow yesterday added to the difficulties of the railroads

Revelations of a Wife

WHY MADGE MADE DICKY CHANOE TO THE CAR AHEAD "This way Jamaica express. Way stations to Babylon." We could still hear the man at the train gate directing passengers as we went leisurely down the steps and over the platform to the waiting tram. I was glad that we had plenty of time. I do so hate to be hurried when I take a train, or Indeed, at any other time. "How can an express stop at way stations?" J asked the question idly. I knew it was Inane, but Dicky was looking for the girl in the cerise bat, and I did not wi6h him to know I observed his Interest. So I tried to make conversation cn any topic. "We change at Jamaica," Dicky explained patiently, his eyes roving over the people on the platform. "This train Is an express to Jamaica. Then it goes on to Long Beach, by way of Lynbrook. At Jamaica we get a red upholstered horror of a coach in which we ride to Marvin. It ambles on aftei that to a lot of other stations on the south side of the island. I've never been out that way, although I've heart it is a mighty Interesting trip. We'll take It some time this summer." He guided me into a coach, but I gave a little exclamation of dismay as I saw that the coaches were like those of the elevated roads, four cross seats, accommodating only 16 people in the middle of the car, and the rest of the seats long benches on the side. Of course there was a man in each cf the corners of the four seats facing forward, the only seats In which I am

Here's New Rubber Bathbg Head-piece

IF v

neath bis breath, so that no one can detect that he Is talking save the person whose ear Is nearest to him.. It Is convenient sometimes, but at other times it is most embarrassing, especially when Le is making comments upon people near us. "I don't blame her for elevating one Toot above the other." Dicky rattled on "Not One woman In a thousand can wear those white spats. She must have mighty small, well-shaped tootsies under them." The girl sat looking straight ahead Of her. The crossing of her knees revealed a swirl of silken petticoat, and more than a glimpse of filmy silk stockings. Her shoes were patent leather pumps, utterly unsuitable for a trip to the country. Over them she wore spate of the kind affected by so many girls. I had a sudden remembrance of times in my own life when a new pair of shoes was as impossible to attain as a whole wardrobe. I bad a sudden Intuition that the unsuitale pumps were like the rest of her clothes, left over from some former affluence. She had bravely made the best of them by covering them with the spats, which I knew she could obtain quite cheaply at some bargain sale.

This charming rubber bathing cap is one of the most unique offerings of the season. The feature of the cap is the bird, made of the same material, which is its only trimming. '

Heart and Home Problems

DESERTS SOCIETY OF CAPITAL TO TAKE UP JOURNALISM

Ui Batiste, voile. charmeuse, n, taffeta, velvet.serge or gabarcould be used for this model. The cs on the skirt may bs omitted, i dress may be finished without the iro and with long or short sleeve, i style lends Itself nicely to comitions of material, be Pattern is cut in 4 sizes: 6, 8, icad 12 years. Size 8 requires 4 Is of 36-lnch material, pattern of this illustration mailed ny address on receipt of 10 cents

liver or stamps.

is

ress

Idress Pattern Department, Pallaf

Dear Mrs. Thompson: I am a wom

an of thirty-five and I have had rather a rough road to ride all my life, as my father died when I was very young. I have an older sister and two older brothers who were never any help to my

mother, because

my sister and one brother became missionaries and

my other brother

became a minister on a very stoall salary. My mother gave me an education in music and I have tried to teach, but I cannot get enough pupils to make it pay. I teach singing. My mother has always kept a few roomers so that we could get alone.

We have had one voung man with us

I for several years. He is twenty-eight j years old and was recently drafted. He

naa maae a very good living ana carries a good life insurance. He seemed to love me from the first and would have me sing for him every chance I had. The came home on a furlough at Christmas and he asked me to marry him. I refused, although I love him. He is so much younger than I am that I wanted to be fair to him. He will not give me up and every time he writes he asks me again and says he is waiting for me to say yes. We have known each other for four years and in that time he has not cared to go with any other girl. What do you think? Do you think it would be unfair to marry him under the circumstances? GEORGIA. In your case I think it would be all right for you to marry the man. Since you both love each other so much you should not let the question of age stand between you.

Dear Mrs. Thompson. (1) If a boy friend give a girl a brithday present is

It proper for her to give him a pres

ent also? ' (2) There Is a certain fellow whom I have gone with, but not for some time. I am having a few of my friends over and I would like to have him also. Would it be proper to invite him? (3) I am going to entertain the young people of the church I go to and I would like to know if it would be all right for me to invite a friend of mine who does not belong to the same church that I do? IGNORANT. (1) It is better for her not to give him a present. (2) It ig all right to invite him unless fte has dropped you with lack of consideration for the way you would feel, or shown that he is not interested In your friendship. (3) Yes, it would be all right to invite him.

ALONZO COOVERT BURIED

EATON, O., Jan. 16. Funeral services were held Tuesday afternoon in Eldorado for Alonzo Coovert, 31, who died of tuberculosis in Dayton, Friday. Burial in Monroe cemetery. He leaves his wife and one child. He was a son of Samuel Coovert, an excounty commissioner.

When you go back to your old town, everything seems sniaher except tie trees.

really comfortable. Men always do that on the elevated trains, make a mad rush to pre-empty those comfortable seats, and I saw that the rule held good on this suburban coach. "What did you say?" asked Dicky, as be motioned me to a seat on one of the side benches. Dicky Is "All Eyes" "Nothing of any importance." I re joined lightly, sitting down. I detest the kind of a woman who Is always trying to change seats, or to alter arrangements made for her in traveling I would rather suffer any inconveci ence than to be so fussy. At any other time Dicky would have pressed me for an answer to his question, would have insisted upon my telling what I had said. But just then the girl in the cerise hat, whom we had seen in the railway station, came through the door with the same air of legal unconsciousness of her surroundings that she had shown while run ning the gauntlet of the admiring and critical eyes in the waiting room. She carried in her hand a email traveling bag, which while not new had received such good care that it was not at all shabby. She spent nc time in selecting a seat, but with an air of taking the first one available sat down directly opposite Dicky and me depositing her bag close to her feet. As she sat down Bhe calmly crossed her knees, something which I hate tc see a- woman do in a public place. "Gee, she has the hands and feet &l right!" Dicky has a trick of mumbling be

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THE WEARY WAY

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fight to get it sad beep U Fight fight day in and day out to prevent being overtaken by ills and ails. Keep wrinkles from marring the cheek and the body from losing in youthful appearance and buoyancy. Fight when ill-health is coming with its pallor and pains, defects and declining powers. . Fight to stay lis course and drive it off. But fight Intelligently. Don't fight without weapons that can win the day for without the intelligent use of ef fective weapons the pallor spreads and weakness grows and a seemingly strong man or woman ofltimes becomes a pray to ills after all. You will not find this class of persons in the hypoferrin ranks. No unhealthy, dull, draggy, droopy person in that line. It is a hale, hearty, robust aggregation of quick-steppers who view life in a joyous frame of mien and are mentally and physically equal to any emergency. Hypoferrin standi for sound body and sound mind it is the invigorating tonic of the times powerful and unsurpassed as a health restorer, vitalizer and health preserver. Fight to hold the vigor (! a sound body with hypoferrin or to stay the process of decay and restore health and strength you win. . This tonic of amazing, wonder-working properties has been approved by physicians as a restorer and safeguard cf health. It is a thoroughly scientific preparation of the very elements necessary . to .tone up the stomach and

nerves, iu uuiia Eirung, uii make pure blood, firm flesh and solid, active, tireless muscles. Hypoferrin contains those mighty strensrth-produclngr grent lecfthinand iron peptonai. In a form best adapted to benefit the body and its organs. Its ingredients are absolutely r.ecessary to the blood. In nine eaten out of ten a run-down condition, sallowpale complexions that "all in" feeling and frail bodies are due to lack of leo ithin-and-iron peptonate in the system. Tour mental and physical strength and endurance depends upon a lecithin-and-iron peptonate laden blood; steady, dependable nerves end a healthy stomach. With thete you can meet life at

any angleThis wonder tonic, hypoferrin, which is as perfect as science can gret to nature meets every essential demand of the human organism. It is safe and sure and a boom to run-dovrn. wornout men and women. Hypoferrin means nature's own way of bringing color to the cheeks strength to the body and

youth. The powder and paint way of effecting beauty is not needed by hypoferrin women and girls. Their blood, filled with nature's beauty stores, creates conditions that give firmness and grace to the body and the glow of health to the cheeks. No need of going through life sickly and always feeling miserable in this age of medical science. Join the hypoferrin ranks. It puts into you the springy snap and vigor you ought to have and puts life into your body and mind that inspires the confidence that, you confront the world on an equal footing -with anyone. Hypoferrin may be had at your druggist's or direct from us for $1.00 per package. It is well worth the price. The Sentanel Remedies Co., Cincinnati, Ohio.

Miss Elizabeth Stevenson. All the allurements of society life in Washington are to be put aside by Miss Elizabeth Stevenson, granddaughter of former Vice President Adlai Stevenson, and she is leaving the capital to no, not to go to war or do Red Cross work or to nurse soldiers or to marry one of them, but to take up a course in journalism. She has been regarded as one of the most charming out-of-town girls in the capital this winter and has been identified with the debutante set - ' '

A RAW, SORE THROAT Eases Quickly When You Apply - a Little Musterole. And Musterole won't blister like the old-fashioned mustard plaster. Just spread it on with your fingers. It penetrates to the sore spot with a gentle

tingle, loosens the congestion and draws

out the soreness and pain. "Musterole is a dean, white ointment made with oil of mustard. It is fine for quick relief from sore throat, bronchitis,

tonsutus, croup, son neck, asthma, neuralgia, headache, congestion, pleurisy, rheumatism, lumbago, pains and aches of the back or joints, sprains, sore muscles, bruises, chilblains, frosted feet, colds on the chest (it often prevents pneumonia). Nothing like Musterole for croupy children. Keep it handy for instant use. 30c and 60c jars; hospital sise $233.

ATTEWTTOWt

Sick Women To do your duty during these trying

times your neaiin snouia oe your nrst

consideration. These two women

tell how they found health. Hellam, Pa. "I took Lydia E. Pinkham's Veg. etable Compound for female troubles and a displacement. I felt all rrm down and was very weak. I bad been treated by a physician without results.

so decided to give Lydia E. Pickham's Vegetable Compound a trial, and felt better right away. I am keeping house since last April and doing all my housework, where before I was unable to do any work. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is certainly the best medicine a woman can take when in this condition. I give yon permission to publish this letter." Mrs.E. B. C&carxnrc, E. Ko. 1, Hellam, Pa. Lowell, Mich. -"I suffered from cramps and dragging down pains, was irregular and had female weakness and displacement. I began to take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound which gave me relief at once and restored my health. I should like to recommend Lydia E. Pinkham's remedies to all suffering women who are troubled in a simi. lar way." Hrs. Elise HkocR.No. 6, Box 831Lowell,Mich. Why Not Try

WBIA E.

IYDIA CPINKHAM MCOICfMC CO. LYNN. MASS.

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