Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 43, Number 85, 19 February 1918 — Page 5
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM. AND SUN-TELEGRAM. TUESDAY, FEB. 19, 1918
SPRING ON WAY S0f.1EWHERE,SAYS NATE EDWARDS
ECONOMY. Ind., Feb. 19. A letter mas received from Edward D. Martin who has been living in Cincinnati the past Eix months, stating tbat be was married Feb. 13. on bis forty-third birthday anniversary, to Mrs. Emma Smith, 37. at the M. E. parsonage by Kev. Heistand. They were to have been married early last fall, but Mr. Martin was working for the government and the marriage was postponed. After their honeymoon in the South they will return to the Queen City and remain there until the first of May, then they will move to Kokomo where they will build a home. Both parties are well known here and their friends here wish them a fine tailing with bundles of prosperity falling at every point in their journey. The Economy Friends Sunatbala club gave a penny supper Saturday night, in the, church basement Dr. Stork brought Mr. and Mrs. Joe Lamb an eight-pound German foe Gua Weyl, farmer, made known how much Income tax be was due to pay the government. He has sold horses, cattle and hogs in 1916 and as a side lino sold $1,100 worth of cream and $275 worth of chickens and eggs.... Aaron Bowman, 75 years old, is ill with pneumonia and leakage of the heart. He is in a serious condition. .. There is a new Jitney plying between Economy and Richmond driven by Carl Lundy. He will make daily trips ....The mother of Leland Bryant has just had a letter from him after a wait of three weeks. He is now in Franco.... The Economy Ladies' Aid society will furnish the lunch at the John V. Taylor stock sale Thursday. .... Dr. Loop was called to Thorntown Sunday on the account of the death of his only sister. He will return to Economy Tuesday or Wednesday.... The first large drove of robins landed In Perry township Saturday. There was between 50 and 60 ni the bunch. Also two blue birds and one song sparrow bas been heard. So spring must be on the road some where.... The E. H. S. will give a play the 15th of March. The homo orchestra will furnish the music.
Heart
vpro
mw
Home
ELrlZABETH THOMWON
Dear Mrs. Thompson: How can I remove hair from my arms? A. E. I Do not try to remove hair from your arms, because it will come in so much coarser and heavier if you
do. Bleach it with peroxide so that it will not show a3 much. Peroxide is very drying and will have a tendency to reduce the growth. Dear Mrs. Thompson: Will taffeta and georgette crepe be worn this spring? O. K. They will be very popular. Dear Mrs. Thompson : I am a young girl nineteen years old and have pimples under my
skin: also many blotches on my face. Would you please give me a good remedy for this. Thanking you very much. PAULA. I hesitate to advise you about your skin. I should advise you to consult a physician. There are many preparations for the skin but unless you get
at the bottom of the trouble the relief from these cosmetics will only be temporary.
Dear Mrs. Thompson: I am a very young girl, eighteen years old and I am troubled with wrinkles under my eyes that are becoming more noticeable every day. I would thank you very much if you would give me a remedy that will not harm my skin as it is very tender. YOUTH. If you massage your face carefully every morning before retiring I feel sure the lines will gradually disappear. However you should be careful to rub away from the nose beneath the eyes instead of toward the nose. Dear I.Irs. Thompson: I will be seventeen years old August 27, 1918. Do you think I am too young to become a Christian or not? Are you a Christian? am not a Christion. Brown Eyes. MARIE. You are certainly not too young to become a Christian. Whenever you are old enough to tell the difference between right and wrong I think you may become affiliated with the church organization of your choice. 1 am a member of a church, if that is what you mean by asking me if I am a Christian. If one tries his best to do his best every day it seems to me he is a Christian.
Revelations.of a Wife BY ADELE GARRISON
A PROMISE AND A HINT
"You know I could never forget you, Mrs. Stewart." I said, feeling a very hypocrite as I spoke. I dreaded to tell her that it was not my wish to see
her but my desire to obtain a favor
visit.
"Of course you're going to stay to dinner, and why didn't you bring your
husband along?" She shot the ques
tions at me in the rapid fire fashion I
remembered. I mentally braced myself to tell her the truth.
"Dear Mrs. Stewart," I 6aid, taking
vrnm;y
ouLeliOld
Hirttor - -
MRJ1. M ORTON
MENU HINT Breakfast. Oranges Rice Muffins Oleomargarine Coffee Lunch. Baked Sausage with Potatoes Buttermilk Bread Crumb Cake Tea Dried Lima Beans Hollandaise Philadelphia Relish Fruit Salad Halt Cups Coffee. BREADS Graham Bread Take one-half cup of warm water. It should then be kept warm until the yeast gets all foamy, Too much heat scalds it and not enough keeps it from rising. Get the right heat by having the tea kettle boiling and then turning the lid upside down and put the cup in the lid. Then keep the water simmering till the yeast has risen. Add three teaspoons of sugar to the yeast. Put graham flour in a pan and pour In the yeast-water. Then add one and one-half teacups lukewarm water and teaspoon salt. Stir until you can poke your finger in the dough and none sticks to it. Let It raise and pan it. Let it raise again and bake slowly for about an hour. This recipe is good f6r whole wheat and white bread also. The only difference is to use one-half spoonful of salt for whole wheat and a pinch for white bread. The graham can be made with one-third white, with salt accordingly. Makes one -whole loaf and one small loaf. Favorite Biscuit Two quarts flour, two tablespoons lard substitute rubbed fine in flour, two teaspoons cream tartar, one teaspoon soda, two teaspoons Bait sifted in flour, one pint water to make soft dough. Roll an inch thick; cut and bake. THE TABLE Split Pea Soup One cup dried split peas, three cups cold water, one-half teaspoon sugar, one teaspoon salt, speck pepper, one-half tablespoon butter.one half tablespoon flour. Milk or untpr to thin it. Soak peas In water
half hour. Change the water and let J
them simmer siowiy unui tney make
a soft, pulpy mass. Strain, add sugar,
salt, pepper and heat. Cook butter
and flour together until smooth, add
the soup gradually, and enough milk or water to make the original quality,
three cups. One-half cup tomatoes may be added to soup, if liked, in place of part milk or water. Boll up thoroughly once and serve. Potato and Meat Pie To each cup
meat, one-third cup gravy or one-quar
ter cup water, one-quarter teaspoon salt, speck pepper, few drops onion
juice, five or six potatoes. Chop cold meat fine, put in greased baking dish
and pour over gravy, add seasonings
Boil and mash the potatoes and spread as crust over meat. Smooth crust and bake on grate of oven until golden
brown, from fifteen to thirty minu-
utes.
Tach Will serve five people. Take six large potatoes, peel and grate them; one pound of lean beef and
one-half pound of fat pork cut in very small pieces. Cut up two large onions.
add teaspoon salt, a little pepper. Mix all together, put in well greased spider, then sprinkle one tablespoon flour on top and bake two hours in oven. Serve
hot. Johnnycake, tea and some pickles will make this a good supper.
Cookie One cup powdered sugar, one-half cup lard substitute, one-half cup sour cream, two egg yolks, one-
half teaspoonful salt, one teaspoon soda, one-half teaspoon nutmeg. Roll soft. Sprinkle granulated sugar on top
and hake.
America Is the Bread Box of the
World.
Try Making Your Own 0 Cough Remedy
Ton ran t abont f?, mnA hT m bottrr remedy t ban tb mdy made kind. Eaally dona.
If vou combined tho curative propertics of every known "ready-made couch rrmrdv, vou would hardly have in them ull the curative power that lies in thia simple 'home-made" cough syrup which takes only a few minutes to prepare. Oc t from any druggist 24 ounces of Pinex flO cents worth), pour it into a pint bottle and fill the bottle with plain rranulated sugar syrup. The total cort i about O.'i ceiits and gives you a full j;:nt of really better cousrh syrup than vou could buy ready-made for $2.50. jl antes pleasant and never spoils. This l'inex and sugar syrup preparation geta right at the cause of a. cough and gives almost immediate relief. It loosens the phlegm, rtops the natty throat tickle and heals the sore, irritated membranes that line the throat - chest and bronchial tubes, so jrcntlaud easily that it is really astonishing A day's use will usually overcome th; ordinary cough and for bronchitis croup, whooping cough and bronchia, asthma, there is nothing better. Pinex is a most valuable concentrated compound of genuine Norway pine extract, and has been used for generation: to break up severe coughs. To avoid disappointment, be sure t ask your druggist for "2j ounces c Pinex" with full directions, and don' accept anything else. A guarantee o absolute satisfaction or money prompt y refunded, goes with this prenaratiot The Tinex Co., Ft. Wayne, Ind.
Decides to Be a Live One Young Man Gets Next to Himself
One of our young men sure has come to the front in short order and his friends are at a loss to under
stand his. untiring energy and ability
to work and get results, where only a few weeks before he seemed to be all run down and almost a nervous wreck. , Questioned by a curious friend as to the cause of the sudden change, he 6aid: "I sure was in bad shape and no one knew It better than I did. It bad my goat for fair. I was all In and my nerves shot to pieces with worriment and sleepless nights. One day I overheard a customer telling what Phosphated Iron had done for him and I could not get a supply quick enough. That's the whole story, Just Phosphated Iron. My poor tired overworked nerves just seemed to be Phosphate hungry, the way they took hold of it, and say, what a relief. I felt like a new man. Could sleep at night, and get up in the morning feeling like a two-year-old. Believe me, I had some appetite, too, my weight increased rapidly, my face filled out and had the color of perfect health that only goes with, pure blood, well fed with Iron. "You can bet I am strong for Phosphated Iron. Everyone who tries it is a booster. "Do you know even the doctors are prescribing it; trust them to get next to a good thing; they were not long wiselng up to Phosphated Iron." To insure doctors and their patients getting the genuine Phosphated Iron we have put in capsules only, so do not allow dealers to substitute pills or tablets. Conkey Drug Co. and leading druggists everywhere. Adv. (
her hand. "You must forgive me, but I came today only on an errand, and I must go away again almost at once. I am coming to spend the day with you very soon, however." "Well, I thought it was too good to be true if you had come all this way just to visit a poor old woman." she said shrewdly. "But that's all an old woman has any right to expect from a brid?. They're thoughtless creatures, brides. I was one once myself, and I know." She laughed heartily, then patted my shoulder. "Out with It, whatever you want of me," she said. "You know I'll do anything I can for you." I felt a curious reluctance to tell her what I wanted, but I knew the thing must be done. "You remember my mother's cousip, Jack Bickett?" I began. "Do I remember him? God love him I should say I did remember him." she answered me; then with another shrewd look at me. "Why?" "You know he went away to South America a year ago, just after mother died, and before I had ever met Mr. Graham?" She nodded. It was never her way to waste "words. "He's coming back today. I had a letter from him a few days ago, saying so." "I forwarded it to your address myself." "Yes, and I thank you for doing so," T hastened to assure her. "But you see, he doesn't know anything about
BEAUTIFUL EYES
You can make your eyes beautiful by applying
LASH-BROW-INE
nightly. It makes the eye-
and luxuriant. Successfully use
' to euanateid para and harnlm.
7 Price S8c. Recommended
sold by TMetletfewalte'a 5 Store.
It
MODEL
A POPULAR
2353 Gingham, percale, chambray, seersucker, flannelette, lawn, drill, linen and gabardine, are nice for this style. The fronts are closed in coat style. The skirt has gathered fulness. The sleeve may be in either of two lengths. The Pattern is cut in 7 sizes: 34, 36, 38. 40, 42, 44 and 46 inches bust measure. Size 38 requires 7 yards of 36-inch material. The skirt measures abo.it yards at the foot. A pattern of this illustration mailed to any address on receipt of 10 cents in silver or stamps.
Kama .. v... Address i Cit
Mr. Graham, doesn't dream that I'm married, and I " I "You want me not, to tell him if he calls yon tip here." "You are positively uncanny, Mrs. Stewart," I cried. "How did you guess it?" "How could I help guessing it?" she retorted. ."But you needn't have worried. I wouldn't have told him anyway. That's a surprise I wouldn't want to be' the one to hand to Mr. Jack Bickett I wish you joy of your job of telling him." "Why, Mrs. Stewart, whatever do you mean?" "None are so blind as those who will not see," Mrs. Stewart returned cryptically. V - Her words lingered in my ears long after 7 had left her with the understanding that if Jack should call her up she would simply say 1 had moved and give him ray new telephone address. Why did she call me "blind"? Why Dicky Quoted Jack "Where have you been?" Dicky's tone was peremptory- I had hoped to get back from my early trip to Mrs. Stewart's home before he awoke, but when I entered our own door he was sitting by the window. "Out for a walk." I hated myself for the evasion, but I knew if I told Dicky the truth, that I had made a hurried trip to my old landlady's to prevent the possibility of her telling Jack Bickett I was married before I saw him myself, another scene would be the inevitable result. "Humph!" Dicky sneered disagreeably. "I suppose you are so upset over the prospective arrival of that gor that girlhood admirer of yours that you bad to take a walk to calm your nerves."
lowing topics: "Current Events." Mrs. t,'tlli rrirr.haOTnan- "RniM fit th
liliaiii A lumv in... , w Educational Advantages of Travel," Mrs. R. D. Gillespie; "The Cooking of Meats," Mrs. Lawrence Reed. FINDS HIDES WORTH $15,000 ANDERSON, Ind., Feb. 19. Appraisers of the estate of the late Joseph L. Phillips, slaughter house owner, found that he had $15,000 worth of hides stored away. ,
JACKSONBURG, IND. !
Rev. Charles Schultz of Newcastle, organized a C. W. B. M. at the Christian church. There are 23 members. The following were elected officers: Chairman, Kiss Willys E. Personett; vice-chairman, Mrs. Ida Walters; secretary. Miss Hester Dougherty; treasurer. Miss Opal Burg Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Craig of Cambridge City were the guests of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. William Wilson Mr. and Mrs. Kinsinger are the parents of a girl Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Dougherty spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Z. D. Dougherty and family Mrs.
QUIT MEAT IF YOUR KIDNEYS ACT BADLY
Take tablespoonful of Salts if back
hurts or Bladder bothers Drink lots of water
kHa Rurronzha "was in Richmond
Saturday -...Wprd has bean received
that Mr. and Mrs. Orville Dally, formerly of this place, are the parents of
a boy Mr. and Mrs. Joe Brooks entertained Rev. Charles Schultx Sunday .Mr. and Mrs. L. D. Dougherty spent Monday in Cambridge City.
FARMERS' CLUB TO MEET
OXFORD, O., Feb. 19. The Social Farmers' club will hold its February meeting tomorrow at "Grey stone," the home of Mr. and Mrs. John F. Gillespie. These papers will be read: "Should Butler County Farmers Gut, and Feed All Corn Fodder?" by Clem Conn; "The Effects of Unbalanced Population," by R. D. Gillespie; "Will Interest Rates Advance After the War?" by Samuel E. Fry. The wives of the members will discuss the fol-
How to Acquire Hair Beauty
Vou can enjoy a delightful shampoo with very little effort and for a very trifling cost, if you get from your druggists a package of Canthrox and dissolve a teaspoonful in a cup of hot water. This makes a full cup of shampoo liquid, enough so it is easy to apply it to all the hair instead of just the top of the head. Your shampoo Is now ready. Just pour a little at a time on the scalp and hair until both are entirely covered by the daintily perfumed preparation that thoroughly dissolves and removes every bit of dandruff, excess oil and dirt. After rinsing the hair dries quickly with a fiufflness that makes it seem heavier than it is, and takes on a rich luster and a softness that makes arranging it a pleasure. Adv
We are a nation of meat eaters and our blood is filled with uric acid, says a well known authority, who warns us to be constantly on guard against kidney trouble. The kidneys do their utmost to free the blood of this irritating acid, but become weak from the overwork; they get sluggish; the eliminative tissues clog and thus the waste is retained in the blood to poison the entire system. When your kidneys ache and feel like lumps of lead, and you have stinging pains in the back or the urine is cloudy, full of sediment, or the bladder is irritable, obliging you to seek relief during the night; when you have severe, headaches, nervous and dizzy spells, sleeplessness, acid stomach or rheumatism in bad weather, get from your pharmacist about four ounces of Jad Salts; take a tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast each morning and in a few days your kidneys will act fine. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia, and has been used for generations to flush and stimulate clogged kidneys, to neutralize the acids in urine so it is no longer a source of irritation, thus ending urinary and bladder disorders. Jad Salts is inexpensive and cannot injure; makes a delightful effervescent lithia-water drink, and nobody can make a mistake by taking a little occasionally to keep the kidneys clean and active. Adv.
MERCHANTS' DELIVERY CONKEY'S DRUG STORE Phone 1904. Leslie Cox
V $(00 J
The Well .known Cod Liver' and Iron Tonic, Without Oil. TqMakeThemStrong Over-worked Men, whose vitality becomes impaired by long hours of arduous labors, need just such a vitalizing, blood-making and strengthening tonic as Vinol is proved to be by its published formula. There is no other medicine that builds up health, strength and vitality so surely. HERE IS PROOF " I was all ' fagged out,' run down, no appetite, nervous, sleepless nights, and drowsy during the day, and was not fit to work. A friend told trie to tka Vinol. I did so, and can now eat three square meals day. I sleep well, am alert, active, strong and well, and have gained eleven pounds." A. W. Higby, Cheboygan, Wis. WE WILL RETURN YOUR MONEY if Vinol fails to benefit you. Clem Thistlethwaite, Druggist, Richmond and other drug stores
' , ,
Size
Address Pattern Department, Palladium.
NEFF & NUSMUM'S
Sale of Ladies' Shoes Big Discounts on Special Lots
Lot No.l We have about 200 pairs of Ladies Novelty Lace Boots, in Gray, Brown, Ivory and White Tops also solid colors. All good styles and values. These lots are broken sizes and worth up to $8.00 a pair our Clean-up price
$4.95
Lot No.2 We have about 250 pairs of Ladies' Patent Vamp Shoes, lace and button, cloth and kid top, high, low and medium heel, at a discount of 51.00
Per Pair
Lot No.3 150 pairs of Ladies' Kid and Gun Metal Shoes, tip and plain toe, mostly small sizes, 2 J, 3
and 3; Clean-Up price
$1.98
For service, these are as good values as $5.00 to $8.00 Shoes. These special prices for Wednesday, Thursday, Friday and Saturday. Come in early and get your choice of these bargains.
Neff & Nos
1 :
The Shoe Corner 7th and Main Sts.
baein R
