Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 43, Number 83, 16 February 1918 — Page 5

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND UN-TELEGRAM SATURDAY, FEB. 16, 1918.

FATHER AND SON SERVICES IN THE CHURCHES SUNDAY

Fathcrsand Sons to Be in Charge of Services in Many Churches.

Many Richmond churches will observe "Father and S6n" services Sunday. Secretary AJbus will speak to Fathers and Sons at the Y. M. C. A. Sunday morning during the 8unday school hour of the Grace M. E. church. There also will be three-minute talks by several o the members of the Men's class. Kev. H. L. Overdeer, pastor of Grace church, will have charge of the service at 10:30 o'clock. He will preach on patriotism. Special mention will be made at this time of the "Father and Hot" movement. There will be special numbers by the choir. .At the First Christian church there will be a special service by Rev. IL E. Murray for fathers and sons. The following program will be given: Voluntary March "Militaire," Warrer; Offertory Violin, "Lurllne," Wallace; Male Quartette, selected; Baritone solo, selected, Ralph Little; Sermon, L. E. Murray; Postlude "Meditation." Halevy; Miss Meta Richards, organist. nev. J. J. Rae of the First Presbyterian church has prepared a special sermon,. "Sonless 'and Sunless," for the morning service at 10:30 o'clock. A quartet will sing. "Fathers and Sons" day will be observed at Reid Memorial church. Fathers and sons of the congregation will have charge of all the services. Richard Sedgwick, president of the Y. M. C. A., will speak to the young men. D. W. Scott will read a letter from his son. Lieutenant Harold Scott, who is in France. Robert Lyons, who has been in France will speak to the fathers and sons on conditions In France. His father was pastor of the church at one time. Rev. Elmer E. Davis, pastor of the Second Presbyterian church, will preach on. "The Worth of the Boy," Sunday morning at 10:30 o'clock. Fathers and sons will occupy one section of the auditorium. First M. E. church- will have a "Fatbera and Sons" sermon in the morning by the Rev. R. L. Semans and in the evening the pastor will preach on. "The Religion of Abraham Lincoln." "A Father's Concern" is the subject of .the sermon to be delivered at East Main Street Friend's church Sunday morning at 10:30 o'clock by Rev. J. P. Webb. As a fitting close of the Sabbath sohooj at South Eighth Street Friends church Suuday morning a special "Fsthers and Sons" program has been prepared. Rev. A. F. Mitchell is pastor of the church. At the evening service at the Second Lutheran church. Rev. Raymond Iseley w ill preach on "The Men of Today and Tomorrow." There will be a special program by the fathers and sons of the congregation. The Central Christian church. Rev. Henry W. Sen wan, pastor, will observe the day with special services.

Heart Mome 21 MRX. ELIZABETH THOMPSON

iff

Dear Mrs. Thompson: I am a hard working man nineteen years of age, and I do not have much time to fool around with girls. There is one girl working at the cme place I do

who appeals to me as being a lady, even though she has to work. I have asked her to go skating with me some Sunday afternoon, and I know that she will do it because she said she would ask her mother and tell me tomorrow. My chum who works right with me all day long and in. whom I have every confidence, tells me that it is not right for me to

tKe up witn a working girl. He says I am too good for it, and wants me to break the date. I will not break this date, but I want to know whether to ask her again. I cannot break this date, as she' expects to go, but I will not ask her again if you think it unwise. Please tell me what to do. JORDAN'S. If I were you I would follow my own wishes about the matter and not be influenced by your chum. If you like the girl and she cares to go with you, by all means ask her again, unless in your own heart you know she is not worthy of your attentions. The fact that she is a working girl should not be considered. Dear Mrs. Thompson: (1) I am a girl fifteen years old and you answered one of my questions a few days ago. I have a friend who isn't always nice to me and she has my gold locket and chain. Should I ask for it? Whenever I have what she likes she always asks to wear it. and then she forgets to give it back, but I don't

forget. She has plenty of ways to send it back. What shall I do? I want my locket for it is gold. (2) Can a red-haired girl wear green? ' OPAL W. (1) Ask the girl for the locket, and If she doe3 not return it have your mother or sister write a note to her mother asking her to see that it is returned. , (2) It is generally supposed by redhaired people that green is a becoming color, but in most cases it is not. Green makes the red hair too vivid. Sometimes, when it is a brown green, It is becoming. Dear Mrs. Thompson: 'Will you please tell me if it is proper for a young lady to write to. a soldier away from home, whom she has known for several years, even if he is going steady with another girl? This soldier enjoys my letters and expressed his desire that I write to him, as he is lonesome. Our letters are only friendly. Should his steady girl be jealous? Is it all right for me to send him candy? This soldier wrote to me first. I do not want to cause hard feelings. J. B. It is not best to write to an engaged soldier even if the letters are only friendly, because it is apt to make the girl he is engaged to unhappy. The girl should not be jealous, but there

is a great chance that she would be. Invite his girl to come to your house and make candy for him, and then send it together. In this way she could not Le hurt and the candy would please him just as much. Dear Mrs. Thompson: I have been keeping'fcompany with a young man who enlisted in the navy. I correspond with him and think quite a bit of him. Would it be right for me to keep company with other young men during his absence, or would it be doing him an injustice? BLUE EYES. If you are not definitely engaged to him you are at liberty to go with other young men and will not do him an injustice.

Revelations of a Wife BY ADELE GARRISON

LIL SPEAKS PLAINLY Dicky was fast working himself into a rage. Lillian Gala evidently knew the signs as well as I did, for she hurridly began to fasten her cloak, which she had opened on account, of the heat of the room. "I really must be going," she murmured, starting for the door, but Dicky adroitly slipped between it and her. "Talk about your romance, Lil," he sneered, "what do you think about this one for a best seller?" "Oh, Dicky!" I gasped, my cheeks scarlet with humiliation at this scene before ,Mrs. Underwoood, of all people. But Dicky paid no more attention to me than if I had been the chair in which I was sitting. "Beautiful highbrow heroine," he went on, "has tearful parting with gallant hero more noted for his size than his beauty. He's gone a whole year. Heroine forgets him, marries another man. Now he comes back, heroine has to meet him and "break the news that she is another's. Isn't it romantic?" Lillian looked at him steadily for a moment, as if she were debating some course of action. Then she suddenly squared her shoulders and, advancing toward him, took him by the shoulders

and shook him slightly

I'll wager you anything you like that Mrs. Graham never knew of your temper until after you had married her. But now that you're married you think you can say anything you like. Most men are like that!" She spoke wearily, contemptuously.

as if a sudden disagreeable memory had come to her. She dropped her' hands from his shoulders.

"Of course, I've no right to butt in like this, as if recalled to herself. "I beg pardon of both of you. Good-by," and she dashed for the door. But Dicky, with one of his quick changes from wrath to remorse, was before her. "No, you don't, my dear," he said.

grasping her arm. "You know I could not get angry at you no matter what i you said. I owe you too much. I know j

I have a beast of a temper, but you know too. T'm over it just as quickly. Look here." He flopped down on his knees in an exaggerated pose of humility, and put up his hands first to me And then to Lillian. See. I beg Madge's pardon. I beg Lillian's parodn. everybody's pardon. Please don't kick me when I'm down." Lillian's face related. She laughed indulgently. "Oh. I'll forgive you, but

1 1 imagine it will take more than that i in mfllffl lrAni- raara Trith vnnr wifo'

than against Dicky. Probably she meant well, but bow dared she talk to my husband as if he were her personal property, and what was it he "owed her" that made him take sucn a raking over at her bands? STOCK MEN SUFFER LOSSES WASHINGTON, Feb. 16. Although assured by the food administration that efforts to stimulate war time meat production would be rewarded by "reasonable profits" stock raisers j... incite iip.rause the gov-

of the country now are experiencing ernment has neglected their Jntf est the senate food inquiry was told today ... r tr Tnmiincnn of Denver: sec-

retary of the American National Live .

Stock association. COL. BURR TRANSFERRED ROCK ISLAND. 111.. Feb. 16. Col. George W. Burr, since 1911 commandant at the Rock Island arsenal, has ' been transferred to the office of the j chief of ordnance at Washington, wbere he will be assigned to larger; responsibilities, it was learned here today. He is succeeded here by Lieut.

Col. Normon F. Ramsey.

DENIES THEFT OF PAPERS

WASHINGTON. Feb. 16. Reports of the thefts of valuable papers from the censorship officers at New York were again denounced as untrue today by William Churchill representing the committee on public informatioin before the house committee on expenditures in the postoffice department.

in a trunk like newspapers;, they are so unyielding that wrinkles and protuberances cannot make themselves felt. It is useless to try to arrange heavy articles at the bottom of a trunk and the light ones on top the baggage handlers know no top and no bottom. Convenience in handling is all that concerns them. Keeping an even, smooth surface for each successive layer one is doing one's best to protect the contents.

HOUSEHOLD HINTS

MENU HINT Breakfast Baked Pars r as Economical Omelet Rice Waffles Oleomargarine Coffee Lunch

Vegetable Roup ' Cornbread Sticks Date Pudding Tea Dinner Norfolk Oysters (With Rice and Crumbs) Lettuce, Pineapple and Cream Cheese Salad Half Cups Coffee HINGS WORTH KNOWING .. A Hint In Economy to those wearing rubber heels on their shoes When heels become run over go to the

shoe repair man and have him remove the heels, putting the rubber heel of the right shoe on the left shoe and vice versa. In this way you will get twice as much wear out of your rubber he'ls as you would ordinarily. To Clean Aluminum perfectly, rub with cloth wet with coal oil and covered with salt. When 'shlrta Become worn at the cuffs and neck cut off neck band, put on a laydown collar; cut off worn sleeves to three-quarters length and sew on new cuffs. Both collar and cuffs are of some white material at hand. Then cut waist right length, put hem. in bottom. and insert rubber. Nothing Fills th Place of a buffer

CAKES AND COOKIES Cheapest Cake One-half cup each of hot coffee, lard, hot water and cocoa; two cups brown sugar, three cups flour sifted with one teaspoon baking powder, one teaspoon soda dissolved in the hot water. This will make two very large layers or three small ones. Frost with powdered sugar wet up with milk and flavor with vanilla. Molasses Cake One cup molasses, one-half teaspoon ginger, one-half cup drippings, one cup boiling water, one scant teaspoon soda, flour. Mix ginger with molasses, pour into boiling water with 6oda already mixed. Add enough flour to :nake a oft batter. Bake in a moderate oven from twenty-five to thirty minutes. You will have two nice sized cakes. Pepper Cup Cakes Three cups of brown sugar, two eggs, one large stirspoon lard, one teaspoon each of cinnamon . and cloves, scant teaspoon

in three greased layer cake pans about fifteen minutes in hot oven. White Cake Powdered sugar, one and one-half cups; two-thirds cup lard substitute well creamed; two cups flour and one-half cup cornstarch well sifted together; one teaspoon cream of tartar, one-half teaspoon soda, one-half teaspoon salt sifted two times in flour; whites of two eggs, two-thirds cup cold water, one teaspoon extract cinnamon or any flavor to Euite taste. Bake in two layers. Unpopped grains of popcorn, which land In the slop-pail, ground in coffee mill or meat grinder, added to fried mush gives it an excellent flavor and saves the corn. Add a little flour to give firmness. Ground popcorn makes an excellent breakfast food. When frying cakes rub the griddle with a slice of turnip to save lard.

It would if vou were my husband.

'Phone me about Sunday. Perhans Mrs. Graham can come over after dinner and meet you there. Good-by." She hurried out of the door, this time without Dicky's stopping her. Dicky came toward me; "If I say I am very, very sorry. Madge?" he said, smiling apologetically at me. "Of course it's all right, Dicky," I forced myself to say. Curiously enough, after all, my resentment was more against Lillian

Seize Guns Skipped for Use in Finland

LONDON, Feb. 16. Great quantities of arms and munitions bound for Finland have been seized in the harbor of Stockholm, the Social Demokraten of Stockholm says, according to an Exchange Telegraph dispatch from Copenhagen. Half a million cartridges, it is said, were delivered there to the order of an alleged private individual. The workmen at the Yes-

"Look here, my Dicky bird," shoito make your peace with your wife

said, and her tones were like icicles. "I didn't want to listen to this, and I j beg your wife's pardon for being here, j but now that you've compelled me to j listen to you, you're going to hear me I for a little while." j Dicky looked at her open-mouthed, exactly like a small boy reproved by his mother. "You're getting to be about the limit with this temper of yours." she began. "Of course I know you were as sooiled a lad as anybody couW be, but that's no reason now that you are a man why you should kick up a rumpus any time something doesn't go just to suit your royal highness." "See here. Lil!" Dicky began to speak wrathfully. "Shut up till I'm through talking," she admonished him roughly. If I had not been so angry and humiliated I could have laughed aloud at the promptness wiU which Dicky closed his mouth. "I'm going to tell you some things for your own good. You probably won't ever speak to me again, but I can't help that. Do you remember the time you threw a heavy candlestick at that tramp you had posing for you, and it took all the rest of us could scrape together to pay the fellow's hospital bills and bribe him not to have you arrested? Of course you didn't intend it should hit him over the eye and lay his scalp open; you just threw the first thing that came to your hand when you had worked yourself into a temper." I saw Dicky steal a shame-faced glance at me. I knew he was thinking of the night he had thrown a cut glass vase of mine to the floor and shattered it because he was in a rage. Dicky's Humble Apology "You never gave me or the boys a taste of your rages simply because you knew we wouldn't stand for them.

I

OLD-TIME COLD CURE-DRINK TEA!

I black pepper, one and one-quarter cups! iri" . Yi. . ?E J1""'"fu lue sv: ithr uVPt nr n,,P milk onp. cm ! ernment that they will stop work if

raUlne nlnr-h of Bait thrpe anrl nno. "I"" lttuuu ui u""""""11 la yci wilicu.

half cups flour, two teaspoons baking

powder, one-half teaspoon soda added j to flour or put into milk if sour milk j is used. Bake in cup tins in a moder-j

ate oven. Powdered Sugar Cake Two eggs, two cups powdered sugar, one cup milk, two cups flour, one-half cup salt, one teaspoon vanilla, four teaspoons baking powder.

I . Beat egg yolks until thick, add sugar

I gradually and beat well; add vanilla land milk; add flour which has been ! sifted with salt and baking powder;

add stiffly beaten wnites oi eggs. uaKe

Get a small package of Hamburg Breast Tea, at any pharmacy. Take a tablespoonful of this hamburg tea, put a cup of boiling water upon it, pour through a sieve and drink r teacup full at any time. It is the most effective way to break a cold and cure grip, as it opens the pores, relieving congestion. Also loosens the bowels, thus breaking a cold at once. It. is inexpensive and entirely vegetable, therefore harmless. (Adv.)

KM

CAN BE CURED Free Proof To You

CVT THIS OI T IT IS WOIITH JIOXEY DON'T MISS THIS. Cut out this slip, enolon with Kf and mail It to Foley & Co.. 2835 Sheffield Ave.. Chicago. 111., writing your name and address clearly. Tou will receive In return a tMal package containing Foley's Honey and Tar Compound, for couxhs, colds and croup; Foley Kidney Pills, for pain in sides and back; rheumatism, backache, kidney and bliu'der ailments; and Foley Cathartic Tablets, a wholesome and thoroughly ilennsingr cathartic, for

cnnviipaiiun, liuiuuMirns, iiuwtti lit- aiiti j aluKKlsh bowels. For sale by A- G. j Luke.n & Co.-'-Adv.

All I want is your nameind address so I can send yon a free trial treat- ! c Wataall, ft. t. ment. I want you just to try this treatment that's ail Just try It. BauaejaT That's my ouly argument. I've been in the drag business in Fort Wayne for 20 years, nearly everyone knows me and knows about my successful treatment. Over six thousand five hundred people outside of Fort Wayne have, according to their own statements, been cured by this treatment since 1 first made this offer public. If you have Eczema, Itch, Salt Rheum, Tatter never mind how bad my treatment has cured the worst cases I ever saw give me a chance to prove my claim. Send me your nnme and address on the coupon below and pet the trial treatment I went to send you FREE. The wonders accomplished in your own case will be proof. munmMsssiSKiiiiiiii CUT AND MAIL TODAY a ai I. C. HUTZELL, Druggist, 259S West Main St., Fort Wayne, Ind. Piease send without cost or obligation to me your Free Proof Treatment.

Woman Feeling Well Again Now Tells How Tanlac Built Up System and Banished Tired Out Feeling. "My health got so bad before I took Tanlac that I thought I wasn't going to be able to hold my place at the laundry," said Mrs. John Shatters 502 Senate street, Indianapolis. "I got so weak that it just seemed almost impossible for me to starvi on my feet all day. "It's different since I've taken Tan

lac, though. Why, I'm really feeling well again. "My system was run down all over before I took Tanlac. I had a tired, exhausted feeling in mornings," I often had dirzy spells, too, and spots would dance before my eyes. "One of the women where I work told me Tanlac had helped her and that it was the best medicine she ever tried, so I took it. I've taken three bottles of Tanlac now and every one of the old symptoms have disappeared. I shall always keep a bottle of Tanlac in my house." Don't let your system get run downWeakness is dangerous. If you are not feeling right, take Tanlac and don't put it off until your condition gets serious. Get Tanlac today. You can get Tanlac at Thistlethwaite's Drug Store or any other good drug store. Adv.

Based On Cost Per Tablet

It Saves 9VCCASCARAf$ QUININE No advance in price tnr this 20-year-old remedy - 25c for 14 tablets Some cold tablets ow 30c for 21 tablets Figured on proportionate cost per tablet, yon save 9e when you buy Hill's Cures Cold

in 24 hours grip in 3 days Money back if it fails. 24 TebUta for 25c. At any Drue Store

A Purposeful Formula Senreco'a formula ia not "Just a little of this and a little of that." It was devised with a definite object In view. Thn nhlert was to nrodnce a tooth

paste possessing medicinal as well as cleansing properties a real cleanser that could be depended upon to remove tartar and keep mouth and gumi healthy. The ideal defined, our laboratories set about to determine the proper combination to produce it. Senreco is the result. It has been tried, tested and pronounced good by hundreds of the profession. Try a tube. A single tube will prove every claim. Will show why thousands today use and demand Senreco and are satisfied with nothing less. AU druggists and toilet counters. Large 2 oz. tub 25c SENRECO Cincinnati

i&H&Hhnaalm&l 1 tOEKTlST) ill JaavaX

Kscne..

. Ace

! Post office..

State

Street and No..

"The Finished Mystery"

The long looked for book has arrived. It shows why the war came, what will be the results and what will follow after. It is the first and only book that makes clear Revelations and Ezekiel. This book is a compilation of the writings of Pastor Russell, who forty years ago showed how the Bible prophets predicted a world-wide war to begin in fall of 1914. The outcome of this war was also predicted by the Prophets. Get "The Finished Mystery" and be one of the wise ones. Daniel 12: 9, 10. The book contains 608 pages embossed cloth. The first copy was sold July 16, 1917, the first week off press 32.000 copies sold, now 3,000,000 edition is on the press. Send us 60c and get it postpaid. Address S. F. Lehman, P. O. Box, 129, Richmond, Ind. Adv.

Martha Washington I

FIRESIDE ROCKERS MADE IN RICHMOND

IN 25 DIFFERENT PATTERNS OF TAPESTRY Sold Here at Manufacturers Prices. Special Footrests Made to Match JD EKL lysseEl

16 SOUTH 7TH ST.

PHONE 1793

ii 1 i j "' 'mMUt ,.-"'- 1 " , .t. J AUTO EQUIPMENT !

PALLADIUM WANT ADS PAY

DOAN IKLHUXE FUNERAL DIRECTORS

W. J. DOAN H. C. DOAN E. H. KLUTE

1106 Main.

Phone 2623

f DaaDDDDaDDDDtiaaaDDDDODDDnDDDaaDDDDD

a

(D)im(B MdDirtB W(E(Blknx Moffe EMg M Bays

a

The Fuel Administrator in Washington has withdrawn the demand for closed Mondays, so We Shall Be Open as Usual on Monday

Next Week is the Final Week of the BigSest Sale oi ths SasDn

ttJE MWM EMD) SALE The Sale that draws the crowds because the people gst real, genuine savings. A Bargain Day Each Day Next Week.

The Fuel Administrator in Washington has withdrawn the demand for closed Mondays, so We Shall Be Open as Usual on Monday

a a

a

DnnnnDnnnnnnonnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnQnnnnnnDan DDaDaaaannnno