Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 43, Number 92, 27 February 1918 — Page 5
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. WEDNESDAY, FEB. 27, 1918.
PAGE FIVE
tyl MRJ ELIZABETH THOMPSON
r 9
Dar Mra. Thompson: 1 (1) Do you think It Is. proper for thrae girls and to boys to ride in a two-passenger tar?. "'.' (2) Should a girl allow her boy
cousin to kiss her? (3) What do you think of a boy who will- take a girl out riding . and ' then tell a second girl he took the first because she wanted to go, not because he wasted her company? (4) Do you think it is proper for girls to sit in the car with their boy friends for a while after ten' o'clock when returning from a drive? TWO SHORTTS. (1) No, it Is improper.
(2) It all "depends , on the . day he does it. If he does it in a way that indicates that he is trying to make love to her, she should not allow it ' : (3) I would think that he was not a fit boy to associate with. (4) No, I do not . Dear Mrs.' Thompson: I am a girl nineteen years old and I have worked erer since I was fifteen. I have gone
to school mornings and to work in the afternoons most of that time. I am now in my senior year at school. Do you think I would undertake too much to go to college?; My mother and father' and I have saved' three hundred dollars toward such a course, and I am told ' it won't go very far, but I am anxious to use what I have that way. FRANCES. Spend the money for a college education as far as the money reaches. You will never regret the time you spend that "way even if it is only a semester or two, because your whole
life will be broadened by your collese experiences. I wi6h you luck, little girl, and I am sure that anyone with your perseverence will succeed. After your money is exhausted earn some more and then go back to college. Dear Mrs. Thompson: We are four girls fifteen years of age. (1) Is it proper for boys to hold us on a sled whle at a coasting party? ' (2) Should a couple leave the coasting party and go to the show? (3) If a boy guides the sled so as to make the girls fall off, do you think they like the girls or are they just in fun? . INTERESTING READERS. (1) It depends upon the attitude of the boys and girls who coast. If it is really a coasting party, and you hang on to each other for safety, it is all right. But if you coa3t for the sake of hanging on to each other, it is not all right. Young people of your age should be chaperoned at your coasting parties. (2) No. (3) They are just in fun. Why con
sider such. a trifling matter? Dear Mrs. Thompson: Will you please tell me whether buttermilk is good to remove freckles if they are light? BLOSSOM. Buttermilk tends to whiten the skin and makes the freckles even lighter, but in most cases it will not remove tueni entirely. Dear Mrs. Thompson: (1) We are two girls of fourteen and eighteen
"BABBLING TONGUES" AT MURRETTE-
Irene Bishop, Miss Rose Wallace, Loren Whitsell, Blanche Ireton. Miss Clara Daub, Conrad Ottenfeld, William Massing of Indianapolis, Ray Lichtenfels, Drew Lacey. Henry Zeitz, Marc Golden. R. M. Thomas, J. S. Foster, George Hatford, A. J. Linemann, H. R. Bowman of Indianapolis, and Mehlon Sheridan.
Mrs. Harry Sharp will entertain members of her sewing club tomorrow afternoon at her home, 205 North Twentieth street.
Marc Shofer returned this morning
from a few days visit with friends in
in Bethlehem, Pa,, and is here on a week's vacation.
Mrs. Edward Warfel and little daugn-
who are seeking advice. One of us Davton. Mr. Shofer is now erunloved
fas a aartc complexion, dartr eyes and d$i brown hair. What colors can she wear best? (2) The other has a lighter complexion, blue eyes and a shade lighter hair. What colors can she wear? MARY, SUE. (lVGreerrj navy blue and red. (2) Brown and light blue and yellow.
Hfoixreliold
Winter - -
MRlT. M ORTON
MENU HINT Breakfast Stewed Apricots Corn Meal Mush Top Milk . Rye Toast Coffee Luncheon Cream of Celery Soup Peanut Saadwiches Stewed Apples Tea , Dinner Ragout of Chicken , (leftover) - Corn .Muffins, Home Canned String Beans Home Canned Green Tomato, Celery and Onion Pickles Chocolate El3nc Mange Coffee HOME-GROUND CORN This home-made breakfast food is very good and inexpensive:. Shell either field or sweet corn and parch until it is brown and easily ground. Then grind it in the food chopper or coffee grinder, first coarse and then fine until it is fine as .meal; sift and serve with sugar and cream or whole milk. . - 'This also makes delicious pancakes and cornbrcad. THE TABLE Cornmeal Dodgers Mix and sift ono cup flour with one cup cornmeal, one tablespoon sugar, one teaspoon salt. Work in two. tablespoons melted shortening with the finger tips. Add enough milk and water to make a soft dough. Drop by spoonful into a greased perforated pie i-late, place in the kettlA' of boiling stew. Cover closely and steam about fifteen minutes. Satisfying . Breakfast or luncheon dish (wartime) Two cups cooked rolled oats, one cup cornmeal (yellow or white), two cups praham flour, one cup white flour, one tablespoon sugar or substitute, one teaspoon finely chopped suet, two teaspoons salt. Mix ingredients dry and put slowly into boiling water sufficient to make mush to slice and fry. The above quantity will make three or four nourishing and economical breakfasts for three cr four persons. One-Dish Dinner To one and onehalf pounds of beef (cut up small) add three quarts boiling water; cook until tender, s;lr and pepper; add one cup macaroni, one small onion minced; allow to cook ten minutes. Make a good dumpling dough' by using one cup flour, three cups cornmeal. salt and four teaspoons baking powder. Sift four times, wet up with enough
water to make soft dough, drop by spoonsful In boilins broth, cook moderately without removing lid for twenty minutes. One-Egg Cup Cakes Cream onehalf cup margarine, add one-half cup sugar gradually Jtnd beaten yolk of one egg. Mix and sift one-half cup flour with two and one-half teaspoons baking powder, add alternately with one-half cup milk to the first mixture. Then add stiffly beaten white of the egg. Bake about -twenty minutes in greased muffin pans. TH'NGS WORTH KNOWING Blemiahea That run through potatoes csn be removed with , an apple corer with no waste. Tapars made from strips of paper to ligtt gas after first burner Is lighted saves matches. Homemade Vinegar When making chopped green tomato' pickles save the
at my side, helping me to rise, getting me into my coat, shielding me from the curious gaze of the other diners. "Here!" He threw a bill toward the waiter. "Pay my bill out of that, get us a taxi quick, and keep the change. Hurry."
"Yes, sir, thank you, sir." The waiter dashed ahead of us. As we emerged from the door be was standing proudly by the open door of a taxi. "Where to, sir?" The chauffeur touched his cap"Anywhere. Central Park." Jack helped me in, sat down beside me, the door slammed cad the taxi rolled away. The only other time in my life Jack had geen me cry was when my mother died. Then I had wept my grief out
on bis shoulder secure in the knowi
Popular Celebration of
Win-the-War Day '
Urged on Every City
is
"Every band in th country will then, play "The . Star Spangled Banner "while the people stand at attention.t' says William - Matther Lewis, executive secretary of the. National Committee of Patriotic Societies, in his plan for the celebration of April 6, the first anniversary of the United States' entry into the war, as "National Win the War Day.", "Let Germany feel that this is a popular war in America," he says in the statement sent out to the president of fifty national organizations, to the, members of the Cabinet, and to various government officials. "At the beginning of our second year in the great war," the statement says, "it is fitting that we have sl national consecration to the task remaining before us."
LENTEN SERVICES AT FIRST M. E. CHURCH THURSDAY
Cond adoring is Fine Till She Mislays Transfers ST. LOUIS, Mo., Feb. 27. She was a demure conductorette, making her first "run" without a tutor. She jerked the bell cord with childlike enthus
iasm as the car picked up its morning passengers. It looked like a picnic this cooductoring business until an unthinking, unromantic person aske for a transfer. . She reached for the pocket that customarily held them. They were gone. She blushed, Wept through all her pockets, blushed some more, gulped, and with trembling lips said simply, "Mister, I forgot them." Then she wept all the way down town.
Lenten services will be held Thursday evening at the First M. E. church. There will be a "congregational sing" at 7:30 o'clock. Miss Grace Shera is in charge. Rev Somerville Light District Superintendent will make an address. TO REFORM SCHOOL Crawford Andrews. 13 years old; colored, was sentenced to the boys' reform school Wednesday morning in juvenile court. Tbo boy has been returned from several state charity Institutions as incorrigible.
According to British government statistics recently compiled it takes five women to do the work of four men in the munition factories.
Money talks but just try to borrow some, and you won't even hear it whisper.
Buy thrift stamps and help win the war.
ter, Martha Jean, of Indianapolis, are i edge or tus protDeny love, as iue here for a visit with relatives. Mr. taxi started, he slipped bis arm around
Warfel has sane to Washinston. D. C. le
where he was called, as a representa
tive of the Indiana food administration, to attend a conference of the directors of public information which is in session now. Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Buhl are the parents of a son, Marvin Charles, born Sunday evening at Reid Memorial hospital.
water that drains out and put in a;
suu jug yiuu a. piece oi Drown paper and two tablespoons dark brown sugar. Do not cork tight. ;Mny Like peanut butter, but do not get it because th oil is so quickly absorbed by the paper wrapping. Take a 6mall tin pail and have the butter put directly into that so that all the oil is retained. The butter keeps
moist until all used up
"Whatever it is. dear, cry it out in
my arms," he whispered. But at his touch I shuddered, and drew myself away. I was Dicky's wife. This situation was intolerable. I must end it at once. With a mighty effort, I controlled my sobs and, wiping my eyes, sat upright. "Dear, dear boy," I said. "Please forgive me. I never thought of this or I would have told you over the telephone." "Told me what?" Jack's voice was harsh and quick. His arm dropped from my wrist. , Thoie was no use wasting" words in he telling. I took my courage in both, hands. "I am married, Jack," I said faintly. "I have been married for over a month."
JACK DECLARES HIS LOVE ' "God!" The expletive seemed forced
"There is something I'm going to from hjs ips. i heard the name uttertell you first," Jack rrailed tenderly at ed that way once before, when a man me. "and that is that this big brother j j knew had been told of bis child's stuff is done for, as far as I'm con-1 death in an automobile accident. It
cerned. In fact, I've been just faking: made me realize 33 nothing else could
Revelations of a Wife
When You Buv bread and it is the roll for two cr three years back, : what Jack must be suffering.
wrapped in oiled paper, don't throw I because I knew you didn't care the ) But he gave no other sign of having paper away, as it is fine for rubbing! way I wanted you to. Btit this year ( heard ray words, simply sat erect, and shining top cf cook stove, espe-iout in the wilderness has made meiwjth folded arms, pazing sternly into
daily after frying ii-eats. One paper, realize just what lite would be without; vacancy, while the taxi rolled up titta
can be used two or three times.
Election of officers of the U. C. T. Social club yesterday afternoon resulted in the same officers being reelected. The club meeting was with
Mrs. Harry Roe. Two guests. Mrs. ,
Ernest Dans and Mrs. Frank Gimme were' present. The afternoon was spent in Red Cross sewing after which a luncheon was served by the hostess. The. officers for the. next term are Mrs. George Chrisman, president: Mrs. Fred Lahrman, vice-president and Mrs. W. S. McClelland, secretary and treasurer. The next meeting in two weeks will be with Mrs. Fred Lahrman at her home, 226 Kinsey street. A number of young persons attended the Morrey Tuesday evening dance in the I. O. O. F. hall last evening. The Morrey orchestra furnished music for the following dancers: Mr. and Mrs. W. Brenizer, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Haner, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Aikin, Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Peel. Mrs. Sam Bishop, Mr. and Mrs. M. Adkins, Mr. and Mrs. C. F.. Wiseman, Mr. . and Mrs. C. K. Thomas, Mr. and Mrs. Z. P. Pyle, Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Chiles, Mr. and Mrs. Boone, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Miller, Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Clark, Mr. and Mrs. F. Cluter. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Siner, Mrs. Charles Morton of Hamilton, O., Mr. and Mrs. J. Clark, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Brooks. Mr- an1 Irs- Harry Shaw, Miss Helen Hazeltlne, Mrs. Treva Dafler, Miss Anna Dallas, Miss
I you. rve Deen Kic-King mysen au uvti j avenue. 1 South America that I didn't try to: Huddled miserably in my corner, I I makr you care. I've just about gone(WP.ited for him to speak. I had sum-
through Gehenna too, thinking youjrnoned courage to tell him the truth, might tall in love with somebody while j but I could not have spoken to him I was gone. But I saw you didn't again while his face held that frozen wear anybody's ring anyway, so I said i look. It frightened and fascinated me to myself, 'I'm not going to wait an-! at the same time. other minute to tell her I love her, ! love her, love her." I
Jack's voice, pitched to a low keyi ri rp nrni If T1! 3
IS NOT SINFUL
The purpose of Beauty is to refine
To think that I should be the one! the native uncournness or nuradn na
ture. p all Dow to lis power, 11 is the only autocracy that has no nihilist shadow. Alas! this means the fat woman must serve instead of rule, for
anyway, so that no one should be able to hear what he was saying, sank almost to a whisper with, the last words. I sat stunned, helpless, grief-strick
en
to bring sorrow to Jack, the gentlest, kindest friend I had ever known. "Did I Startle You?" tVt nf all to think- that hv mv
own shortsightedness and obstinacy I ! beauty in woman is a composite of
had let him tell me this secret, which ; Dot h line ann teaiure. I knew he never would have revealed I Thousands of fat women are beautlif he had dreamed I was married. ful of face. But they lag behind in Mrs. Stewart, mv eld landlady, had ! the rare for preference because a too hinted that Jack was in love with me. j ponderous outline" dashes the favor Mv husband had told me point blank; thir face has gained them, that I would find cut Jack's brotherly: Now, pretty fat women can reduce attitude was a mvth. i that fat (not the good pure-lined flesh) And vet I had g-me on blindly to in a very simple way. No exercise this. 1 had even removed mv wedding! no dieting is necessary. Let them and engagement rings and hidden j take one Marmola Prescription Tablet them in my mesh Lag that Jack might I after each meal and at bedtime for a not know of my marriage before I i month. The fat will simply fade No was ready to tell him. wrinkles or pouches of skm will form. "Did I startle you, dear?" Jack lean-i out. the loss will be uniform. The fat
ed over the table, his face anxious. I W1" go a? sieanni.y as 11 came, i-uc
jve, IBB
eye grow more oninant, tne wit sprightlier. Marmola Tablets are a boon and harmless (being made from
the famous fashionable prescription:
tender close to nr.ne. "I shouldn't away, me neaim win impiove
1 1
v3 oz. Marmola, oz. Fl. Ex. Cascara
have told you her?, I know, but
coul'ln't k f-p i: a minute longer." "Oh, Jack, don't!" I moaned and then, to my horror, I began to cry: I rriiM nrt pnntrnl mv snhs although T
covered mv face with my handker- Aromatic. 1 oz. reppenmm vsieu, cnpf " and are likewise cheap, a large case "There, there, sweetheart, I'll have f the druggist or' the Marmola Co., you out of this in a jiff v." Jack was 864 Woodward ave Detroit. Mich., I costing only seventy-five cents. Aov.
Thrift and var stamps bought of Uncle Sam wjU help win the war against Prussianism.
Big Purveyors Prepare for Future Food Requirements Armour and Company introduce Two New Products in Anticipation of Foods Needs for the Coming Year. Chicago, February 27. (Special.) A prominent official of Armour and Company when interviewed in Chicago gave startling information regarding the food situation. He spoke in part as follows: "A study of export figures for the past four years gives some idea of the tremendous drain upon our food resources which has arisen through the necessity of supplying our allies in Europe. In dairy products alone, our exports have increased no less than 1300 per cent. "There is no chance to predict any immediate change and therefore during 1918 the use of butter alternatives in America will be imperative. Since every day brings us nearer to the time when national necessity will make alternative foods universally used, it is exceedingly opportune that Armour and Company have gone into the manufacture of oleomargarine on a larger scale. Through knowledge of world food conditions, w-e are in a position to protect the public from products compounded from inferior ingredients and produced under conditions where quality has been sacrificed to quantity output. 'in Yeribest Oleomargarine and Armour's Nut-Ola, we have two butter equivalents that represent the high development of the industry. As an example of this, it is only necessary to draw attention to the milk used in making Yeribest Oleomargarine and Nut-Ola. This milk is brought in refrigerated cars from the best dairy farms operated under the strict supervision of the Chicago Board of Health. In fitting up our immense new factory, recently completed, we imported necessary machinery and skilled operatives from Holland, where oleomargarine manufacture has been brought to the point of perfection. "I am glad to say that while at the present time the Oleomargarine consumption in the United States has been only at the rate of 2 1-3 pounds per person, whereas in Europe it ranges from 20 to 32 pounds, the public is accepting equivalents on their merits and these economy foods are rapidly gaining a prominent place in the national menu." Adv.
fl
QUICK RELIEF
ROM CONSTIPATION
Get Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets That is the joyful cry of thousands since Dr. Edwards produced Olive TabletSb the substitute for calomeL
Dr. Edwards, a practicing physician fa? 17 years and calomel's old-time enemy, discovered the formula for Olive Tablets while treating patients for chronic coa stipation and torpid livers. Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets do net contain calomel, but a healing, soothing vegetable laxative. No gripins is the "keynote of these
little sugar-coated, olive-colored tablets. They cause the bowels and liver to act normally. They never force them to unnatural action. If you have a "dark brown mouth" now and then a bad breath a dull, tired feeling sick headache torpid liver and are constipated, youH find quick, sure and
only pleasant results from one or two lit-
Thousands take one or two every night just to keep right. Try them. 10c and 25c per box. All druggists.
Boy Saves His Sister from Serious Burns 1 " 1 Claude Duvall, the C-year-old son of Amiel Duvall, Seventeenth and North F streets, saved his sister Leona Duvall, 11 years old, from being serious
ly burned Tuesday when her apron caught fire. She was helping her mother when, in coming too near the open oven, her apron caught fire. Becoming excited, she ran out of the house. Her little brother who was near caught her, and tore the apron off. Thrift and war stamps bought of Uncle Sam will help win the war
against Prussianism.
m Ktoiher, You :1
Should Know I
sri its
that the care of your little one's constitutional habits during childhood, is your first and greatest duty. You should know that the prompt and proper breaking up of the costive tendency to which niostcnildren are prone, may save your child from after-years of digestive misery. That trusted remedy of many mothers, Mother Gray's Sweet Powders for Children, Used by mothers for 30 yeais, gives the little one exactly the digestive assistance needed.
These powders are pleasant to take and eay for parents to ive. There ia no harmful purgative action. When your child i s f everisb. with had
stomach, or freuul and constipated, or'
worms, these powders Trad.Maik. never fail. Price 25c Do"' I icetst at your Druggist. - ay suostrtuta. You should ask for Mother Gray's Sweet Powders FOR CHILDREN.
.1 MS. 1 . M m
hi
a i i -
sSS and get this
teclker Free
Housewives! Try your hand at writing a Seller's Kitchen Cabinet advertisement for us and win this beautiful rocker. It's easy. Just come in and see demonstration. See the wonderful Automatic Lowering Flour Bin and all the other conveniences. Then write your "copy" in 200 words or less, giving reasons why people should buy a SELLERS Kitchen Cabinet
instead of any other make. If you make up your mind you can win! Xry it! It's interesting, educational, profitable to write advertising. And it's doubly so to write about such a wonderful Kitchen Cabinet as the Sellers. Don't Miss This Chance! Come in today or tomorrow sure and get all the talking points. Then try for the prize. Contest closes March 2nd. Copy of prize winning advertisement will be sent to all who compete. Come in and get full particulars.
10th & MAIN STS.
Will Vote on Best . Picture in Exhibit
The Richmond Art. Association will vote by ballot Wednesday evening on 1b beet picture hanging in the Art gallery In connection with the Indiana exhibit. The Mary T. R. Foulke prize will be awarded. "Winter Landscape." by J. E. Bundy is Included in the pictures to be voted on. The gallery will not be closed
tp the public but only" members of the,
association may vote. The result of the vote of the high school etudenU. taken at chapel Wednesday, will be announced at the asso Hton Titlne.
mmiwiw1- am ran
BP!
rv "renin
ZZiVM
ion lr amities
in the UmitecS States 4 CUPS OF WHEAT FLOUR TO THE POUND If each family used 4 cups of flour less per week, the saving would be 22 million pounds or 112,244 barrels every week. The greatest help housekeepers can give to win the war is to make this saving and it can be done by using this recipe in place of white flour bread. Corn Meal Biscuits
cap am Mil milk 1 cup corn meal 2 uWmni aherteaiag
teaspoon salt 1 cup white flour 4 teaspoons Royal Baking Powder
' Save cap of the aeasared floor for board. Pour milk over corn meal, add shortening and salt. When cold, add sifted floor and baking powder. Roll out lightly on floured board. Cut with biscuit cutter and bake in greased pan fifteen to twenty minutes. Our new Red, White and Bine booklet, "Best War Time Recipes," containing many other recipes for making delicious and wholesome wheat saving foods, mailed free address ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO., Dept. H., 135 William Street, New York
FOOD WILL WIN THE WAR
Dr
Pr chard
DENTIST MODERN DENTAL METHODS MINIMIZE UNPLEASANTNESS It is truly wonderful, the ease with which crowning and filling teeth Is done today. Modern and advance methods are in e'ery instance employed for the comfort of the patient with the result that better and more artistic dental work is produced. Consult us for the better kind of dental work. Our work is fully guaranteed, our prices are reasonable and the same to all.
OR. J. W. PRICHARD
EVERY TOOTH GUARANTEED Gold Crowns $3.00 to $5.00 Bridge Work $3.00 to $5.00 Porcelain Crowns $3.00 to $5.00 Teeth, per set $5.00 to $8.00 Extracting 50c Full set of Teeth $5.00 to $8.00 Free Examination. Look for the Big Sign
715 MAIN STREET
MAID IN' ATTENDANCE
PHONE 5210
