Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 43, Number 86, 20 February 1918 — Page 5
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. WEDNESDAY, FEB. 20, 1918
PAGE FIVE
BODY OF MYSTERY BARBER BURIED AT CAMBRIDGE CITY
CAMBRIDGE CITY, lnd., Feb. 20. The body of Jack Welch, barber, who died suddenly three month ago, was buried at Riverside Tuesday afternoon, taking with him the ecrets of his pa6t l'te. The body was held three months after his death and every effort was mad to locate hla friends or relatives. Welch said nothing concerning himself during the time he barbared in Cambridge City. ....Mr. and Mrs. Caleb Lester have returned frcm a visit of two months with their daughters. Mrs. Martin Lanron of Columbns, and Mrs. Thomas Coke of Newark. O Miss Helen IJlcke, a student in Oxford college, spent Saturday and Sunday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hicks, in Mt. Auburn.... IL B. Miller of the Army Board has accepted the position of superintendent of the DoddridgeBeck factory at Milton Mrs. Susie Guyton has returned after (several months spent with hr daughter t Fort Wayne The resignation of E. P. Fllby as town trustee was accept
ed by the Board at their meeting Mon
day evening. His successor has not been appointed Howard Cregar, stationed at the Great Lakes training station, is spending his week's furlough with his parents and other relatives here The 8econd District Board, Fort Wayne has placed in Class I, Division A, the following registrants: Ucscoe Winfield Johnson, Richmond; Owen C. Rich. Fountain City; George W. Carlin, Cambridge City There was a call for the fire department from the residence of C. if. Graver, on West Church street, Monday afternoon, fire having been discovered on the roof. Toe flames were extinguished without serious
loss. The supposition is that the roof
caught from the sparks of a passing railroad engine. .. .The body of Mrs. Nancy C. CLUds, aged 68 years, was brought to this place Monday afterr.oon. and interred at Riverside. Mrs. Cbllda' maiden name was Nancy C Funk, sister of Joseph Funk, who formerly resided at Dublin. ... Mrs. Alice Foster of Deputy, lnd., is the guest of Mrs. Carrie Shroyer and other relatives Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Williams of Richmond were the guests Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. Caleb Lester and other relatives The Helen Hunt club met Monday afternoon with Mrs. Willard Fctro. Miss Alice Bradbury read a paper on "Sanitation;" Mrs. E. O. Paul. "Colonel Goethals"; and Mrs. W. F. Medsker, "The Effect on the World's Commerce," in their relation to the Panama canal. .. .Mrs. Kate Myers of Centerville is the guest of her niece, Mrs. May Bod en, on West Front street.
HAGERSTOWN, IND.
Mrs. Etta Crabtree died at her home here Saturday evening of cancer. She leaves her husband, J. T. Crabtree and one son, Albert Crabtree, of South Bend, two daughter, Mrs. Albert Ginseurg, of Chicago and Mrs. Margaret Nelson, who lives in the home and one grandchild. Garnet Ginseurg. The funeral was held Monday afternoon at her home. Rev. H. E. Truitt had charge of the funeral. The remains were taken to her old home at Maxville, for burial Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Pollard and Mr. and Mrs. Kasey Pollard attended the funeral of Baliey Baldwin, at Richmond. Friday. . . .Miss Florence Lee of Winchester was a gue6t of her mother, Mrs. Alonzo Daugherty Sunday. .". .Lothair Teetor, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Teetor, has enlisted in the navy and will be a cornetist in the marine band.
The house in Joppa. Palestine, where St. Peter stayed with Simon, the tanner, is to be secured by the church army a8 n center for the care of British troops fighting in Palestine.
A Splendid Dress for School or Genera Wear
flsart JirHoumc iproblcmdP fex i MRX.ELrlZABETH THOMPSON
Dear Mrs. Thompson: There is eo much said of the need of meatless and wheatless days each week, I Bhould like to know how we farmers who are careful and economical all the time are to observe the letter of
the law; for in
stance, we are two old people with a gin to -help most of the time. One is in poor health and uses but little wheat bread, except whole wheat flour. We serve corn bread or gems frequently, and sometimes use mush or corn caket, orbuckwheat cakes in cold weather. As for meat, we buy pigs and feed them and then kill them for meat. We must use the ribs,
backbones and sausages while fresh or they get strong. We do not use much meat, anyway. If we run out we do without and prepare something else for our meals. We were out of meat three -and a half months during 1917 and only bought meat twice during tliat time. Why should we have certain days with no meat on the table and certain days when we must not serve wheat bread? Must we obey the letter of the law, or the spirit of it? A FARMER'S WIFE. I can see that you are doing a great deal already to help conserve, but surely you can do a little more if you know that it will help in the great cause. The fact that you are sacrificing while others are wasting should not discourage you. The brave people at home who sacrifice and save are going to do their part in winning the war just as the boys "over there" are doing their3. It is absolutely necessary to have "less" days. If it were left to the judgment of people themselves, very little would be saved. This way
fttaj I las.
restaurants and hotels are conserving a great deaL Don't rebel against the plan, but rather do all you can to conform to war regulations so that your efforts will make you a leading spirit in your community. Your country does not want you o waste. Use what you have that will spoil even if it is a "less" day. Dear Mrs. Thompson: I am a young soldier's wife. We have been married for about four months and I do not live at home, nor do I work anywhere, so of course my husband is my only support, but 1 have never received anything from him. He said that they took $15 out of his last pay. but I have never received it. Can you please tell me where to write? SOLDIER'S WIFE. Write to the Adjutant General, United States Army. Tell him just what you told me and add your husband's company and regiment, etc. The letter should be sent to the Adjutant General's Office, Washington, D. C. Dear Mrs. Thompson: I am a stenographer In a downtown office and just make $S a week, and everything is so expensive that 1 don't see how 1 can live on it. What would you advise me to do? VIRGINIA. A stenographer who is worth hiring is worth more than $8 a week. Tell your employer how hard it is to live on so small a sum and ask him to raise your pay. Study evenings so that you can improve your English, shorthand speed, accuracy and spelling. Dear Mrs. Thompson: Would it be considered patriotic, to eat sauerkraut, as it is strictlv a German dish? C. S. B. Yes. it is considered patriotic, just as it is to eat German fried potatoes or any other dish of that kind. People should eat the kind of cooking that pleases them, while, of course, observing the rules of th U. S. food administration.
Revelations of a Wife
fiissnr IT
outeltold
MR1. M ORTON
MENU HINT Breakfast Stewed Dried Peaches Milk Toast Oatmeal Cookies Coffee Milk for boys Dinner Baked Potatoes Corn Bread Chicken Gravy Tomato Soup Crackers Mixed Pickles Supper Favorite Potato Dish Bread Butter Tea Milk for boys
FOR SUNDAY BREAKFAST Mock Bacon Cook some rolled oats (quantity according to size of family), put in a flat dish until cold, then cut in thin slices and fry in butter. Serve with syrup. Buckwheat Cakes Two cups buckwheat, four teaspoons baking powder, one-half teaspoon salt, one and seveneights cups milk. Sift together buckwheat, baking powder and salt; add milk, slowly; beat well and bake on hot griddle until brown. Serve hot with honey or syrup. Oatmeal Pancakes One cup flour, two cups cooked oats, two eggs, two cups milk (sweet), one teaspoon baking powder. Fry and serve with syrup.
337
2337 Gingham, galatea, chambray, drill, linen, khaki, serge, gabardine, curduroy, elvet and satin may be uspd for this style. The fronts are levmible and overlap at the centre, with the belt sections or sash ends joined to the front edges and holding the fulness over sides and back. The Pattern is cut in 4 sizes: 8, 10, 12 and 14 years. Size 12 requires 4 .. yards of 36-inch material, with 2 strips 36 inches long and 5 inches wide, for the 6ash ends. A pattern of this Illustration mailed to any address on receipt of 10 cents in silver or stamps. Name fc Address city ... Size
Addraaa Pattern Department, Palladium.
BREADS Economical Rye Bread Two quarts rye flour, one quart white flour, one tablespoon salt, two tablespoons corn syrup, one cake yeast. Mix dry ingredients. Take the two tablespoons corn syrup and mix in half pint of lukewarm water. Mix yeast in about half cup lukewarm water. Pour liquid Ingredients Into dry ingredients, mix all together thoroughly to a stiff dough; if more water is required use more, but do not make too soft. Set it aside to rise, form in loaves and bake about one hour. Bran Bread Take two quarts of bran, one quart white flour, one quart buttermilk, one-quarter pint molasses, two teaspoons soda, two teaspoons salt. Mix bran and flour well: add buttermilk with the soda dissolved in it;
add molasses and salt. Bake in slow oven. Makes three good-sized loaves. Bran Gems Two cups bran flour, one cup wheat flour, one and one-half
cups sour milk, one teaspoon soda, one-quarter cvp butter or butter substitute, three tablespoons molasses. These are fine for children, as they act as laxative; better than oatmeal cookies.. No Mystery in Oleomargarine Armour' and Company Take Public Into Their Confidence and Tell Ingredients of Two Important Products Chicago, Feb. 20. A department manager of Armour and Company paid a high compliment to the good judgment of the American people when interviewed in his office today. "Armour and Company," he said, "have reached the position they occupy in the food world through a firm belief in the native good sense and good judgment, of the American people. If we have gained special prominence as food manufacturers, it is because we have followed a consistent policy of laying our cards face up on the table and leaving the decision to the general public. "As an example, look at the tremendous success of our two new products. Veribest Oleomargarine and Nut-Ola. When introducing these new foods, we laid no claim to supernatural powers, mysterious for
mulas, or scientific discovery. On the
contrary, we told the public frankly
what Veribest Oleomargarine was
made of. We didn't claim the dis
covery of Nut-Ola, the vegetable oleomargarine, but admitted voluntarily that we imported not only the process but the actual churns and the men to operate them from Holland where the nut-oleomargarine industry had reached a state of high development. "Wherein lies the success And with an export of dairy products thirteen times greater during 1917 than the average for the three years previous, we saw the necessity of supplying alternatives. And knowing the public, we produced the best oleomargarines it is possible to manufacture. The result has been a 60 increase in the sales of this department. "The American public can be depended upon to buy best quality every time." Adv.
1 had rheumatUm eight yer$.
laatrowfreo.
t took Truster's Rheumatic Tablets
We all took Truster's Rheumatic Tablets. We advise that you take them also.
RHEUMATISM Truster's Rheumatic Tablets Are Purely Vegetable; Harmless, yet powerful. They are manufactured by the very best chemists in the United States. They are knowiuasuthe. -"Re? constructors." Fox Sale by All Druggists 50c the Box If your druggist will not supply you A mite the Truster Remedy Company Huntington, Indiana
For Rheumatism Lumbago and kindred diseases use TRUSLER'S RHEUMATIC TABLETS.,
1 am the picture of health.
Take Truster's Rheumatic Tablets asldid.
f never feh better
WHY DICKY QUOTED JACK Dicky had started to 6ay "that gorilla with the mnmps," which was the epithet he had applied to Jack when he saw his photograph. But evidently he remembered my warning that if he persisted In using the phrase I would cease to be civil to his friends. "Aren't you being a bit Idiotic. Dicky?" 1 answered quietly as I went to my room tq lay off my wraps. He did not answer, and when I returned to the living room he was reading a newspaper. He was indulging himself in a fit of the sulks, I knew but I resolved to be as good humored as possible. "Have you had your breakfast?" I asked, trying to make my voice cheery. "Yes," he answered without raising his eyes from the paper. I knew better than to continue the conversation, so 1 took up a book and sat down in a low chair to pretend to read, for I was too upset to settle to anything. How unreasonable Dicky was! He had expected me to admit Lillian Gale to my friendship, although gossip said that Dicky had been madly in love with 'her when he was younger, and that she was still interested in him. He had been angry when he fancie that my manner was not quite friendly enough to Miss Draper, the beautiful girl whom he had met at Marvin, and whom Dicky had engaged as a model. He had also promised to assist her in her ert studies. And here he was sulking like a spoiled child because I was going to dine with the best friend my mother and I had ever had, who had been in South America for a year, and did not even know I was married! "Till I See You" One thing I saw clearly. I must get Dicky to go away before I telephoned Jack's hotel, or took any chance of his telephoning me. 1 could not risk a scene such as Dicky might make. It was cruel of Dicky to be so ugly about Jack, I said to myself. It would be so pleasant for me if the two men could fce friends. Katie's entrance into the living room was a welcome relief. She came hesitatingly into the room as was her custom when she wished to ask a favor. "I have cup of coffee for you, you come and drink it now," she said insinuatingly. "No, thank you, Katie," I answered. "Perhaps after a while, but I could not drink it now." "You say you not here to dinner?" "No, we are both dining out," I answered, then with a sudden thought I turned to Dicky. "You are going to
Mrs. Underwood's for dinner, are you not?" "I suppose so," he returned gruffly. "You care if I go out a little while? It not be my day out, but " "By all means," I answered heartily, glad of the excuse to get her out of of1 the way if Dicky should Indulge In one of his fits of temper. "Yon may go any time you wish. You need not return this evening for supper, for we shall both be away." "Oh, tank you so-o much. Missis Graham." Katie vanished Into the kitchen. Dicky laid down his paper ond gazed at me fixedly. "Perhaps you would like me to get out, too," he said sneeringly. "Far be it from me to desire to hamper any joyful telephone reunion. I believe this friend of your youth expects you to telephone him this morning, does he not?". His tone cut me, but I resolved to mske one more effort to make him look at Jack's arrival in a more kindly light. "Dicky," I said, going over to him and putting my hand on his shoulder,
"please don't quarrel with me over
this. You make it terribly hard tor me. I have tried to be nice to your women friends, and I do so much want you to be friends with Jack." He threw off my hand with a muffled exclamation and started toward the door of his own room. "Fine chance I'd have of being
RECEIPT FOR WARDING OFF AGE Fat is commonplace middle aged. It stamps a woman as unquestionably
I past the period xf youth. Hence it j lessens her influence. She may charm
still oy nimbleness or wit out tnat indefinite fascination a fine figure wields has fled from her. Forever? No! for it can be regained, and that easily. Youth as expressed in the straight front, the lissome hip, the wavy outline, is not beyond recall. Let any woman who is too well filled out take a Marmola Prescription Tablet after each meal and at bedtime. The sprightliness of youth will come back to her. Off will go the fat, uniformly and smoothly, revealing the foundation of the lost youthful form beneath. Try this method. No exercising or dieting is necessary to take off a pound a day. The Tablet will do it alone. No wrinkles or haggard lines will form; instead the health, the brightness and the litheness will increase. The Marmola Prescription Tablet is absolutely noninjurious (being made of the, famous fashionable formula ya oz. Marmola, oz. Fl. Ex. Cascara Aromatic, 4 oz. Peppermint Water), and it is also inexpensive, a large case, enough to show results, costing, at any drug store, or direct from Marmola Co., 864 Woodward ave., Detroit, Mich., only seventy-five cents. Adv.
friends with Jack" he mimicked my tone perfectly. "Of course. Jack will just be ready to greet me as a long lost brother when he hears about me. I wish you Joy of your job of telling Jack you have a husband at home." "Why Dicky," I gasped. "What do you mean?" "Oh. of course, you don't know. Miss Innocence!" he retorted. "You'd better 'refresh your memory, as the lawyers say, from your dear friend's letter. 'Telephone me so I can see you as soon as possible. I am looking forward to a real dinner at a real restaurant with the realest girl in the world opposite me, the first day I strike New York, so get ready' for me. Till I see you, dear. Always yours. Jack.' " As Dicky repeated the words which had closed Jack's letter to me announcing his return to New York, repeated them with his voice unsteady trora suppressed anger, I sank into my chair aghast.
In Denver it is estimated that there are 10,000 women who speculate ?n oil, and probably 500 who keep a close daily watch on the markets.
IS RICHMOND SATISFIED? The Evidence Is Convincing. The Testimony Open to Investigation. Before a statement can be accepted here, it must be supported by local testimony by the evidence of someone residing in Richmond. Statements from unknown people In remote placet may be true, but we cannot prove them. Here is a statement by a Richmond resident: R, T. Cooper, carpenter, 920 North Twelfth St., says: "My work as a carpenter is hard on the back and kidneys. I suffered from dull backaches with soreness through my loins. I could hardly stoop to pick up my, tools and I was also annoyed by my kidneys acting irregularly. 1 got Doan's Kidney Pills from Quigley's Drug Store and they soon straightened me out and put my kidneys In good shape." Price 60c. at all dealers. Don't simply ask for a kidney remedy get Doan's Kidney Pills the same that Mr. .Cooper had. Foster-Milburn Co.. Mfgrs., Buffalo, N. Y. Adv.
ADAM!
$ Pure Chewing Gum $
a Stick a da?
keeps
a Sore Throat
. away
Beffore-W&ir Prices on a
Few Hoosier Models There are four urgent reasons why you should act at once in selecting youi Hoosier Kitchen Cabinet. Read-
1 -puty (as well as common sense) now demands that you conquer waste in the kitchen. You can do it most easily and completely by having this modern laborsaving machine The Hoosier. 2 Many popular models not all, but some are offered now at before-war prices. And you can pay us as convenient. Your money all back if you are not delighted.
3 No other cabinet brings you the advice of the brainy women composing Hoosier's Council of Kitchen Scientists. No other has Hoosier's scientific arrangement and patented features. 4 Our allotment is limited the wartime demand already exceeds the factory's capacity. Our advice is this come and pick out the model you most admire at once.
Twroo
n a.
KITCHEN CABINET V?
Don't put off. You can afford a small payment now as well as later. That's all you need to get the Hoosier in your home.
TERMS Only $1 as First Payment $1.00 Weekly Until Paid
We Recommend ESTATE GAS RANGES and HOT STORM HEATERS
