Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 43, Number 116, 27 March 1918 — Page 5
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAUt WEDNES., MARCH 27, 1918
PAGE FIVE
BUY GOAL NOW IS WARNING OF FUEL DICTATOR
Serious Fuel Shortage Next Winter Is Forecast of Officer.
WASHINGTON, March 26. More than half a million tons loss In coal production last week caused the Fuel Administration tonight to reiterate warnings contained in the anonuncemcnt of Its zone distribution system that ext winter's supplies of fuel that next winter's supplies of fuel working to capacity. The falling off, if continued, officials said, would mean serious shortage in fuel next winter to those sections not forehanded enough to purchase in advance. In working out a zone system for the distribution of coal, allotlng a certain territory to each producing field so as to avoid cross-luuling and other transportation evils, the normal production and consumption of coal have been balanced so evenly that any drop in output win mean innumerable difficulties In obtaining fuel after cold weather sets in, especially as war needs increase. Warns Consumers. The Fuel Administration holds that having provided a normal and economical method of distribution of fuel it cannot go further than its warning to consumers to purchase early Jn order to protect them from suffering later in the year. Accumulation of reserve fuel by the Administration to fill shortages next winter is not considered either wise or feasible. Criticism of price reductions by tha Administration have been answered by Fuel Administrator Garfield in a letter to Senator Thomas, who recently announced that Colorado mines were closing down because of low prices. Dr. Garfield baid that the cost sheets furnished by the mintes to the Federal Trade Commission "do not warrant the assumption that they have closed down because of inability to operate at a profit." The Committee of Engineers which investisated the matter reported that the reduction in summer prices to encourage storage was made at the request of the Colorado Operators' Committee, and that the Senator was misInformed on relative costs as to the Trinidad and bituminous domestic fields.
CAPTURE OF
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and th?n zim, bang! The bomb exploded not fifty yards away. There was stuff flying in ail directions. Nothing more came down in that immediate neighborhood but since tbnt time they don't waste any time standing out In the open looking for Boche planes. Where He Watches. I have a favorite spot from which to watch. Whenever I hear, of think I hear a Boche, I get right at the door of our bomb proof cellar. We haven't been bombed yet but they have come awful close to us. From this door way I can see all there is to see and it I hear anythins coming. It's easy enough to get inside where nothing but a direct hit could do any damage. It's great sport on a moonlight night to hear the planes throbbing high over head p.nd the big anti-aircraft guns belching away at if from all sides. I was glad to hear that word "Camels" in your letter. I can't wait for them to get here there is nothiug
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lproDlemdr - 5X1 MR. ELIZABETH THOMPSON
Dear Mrs. Thompson: I am a married woman and I have three dear children. I have been so happy with my husband until a few months ago. There is a young woman in our neighborhood who has taken a great
liking to him and she even comes over to our house when he is home and talks to him and does not bother to say a word to me. Every evening she comes in just at the time when I am putting my babies to bed and she stays while I do that and while I wash the supper dishes, and she doesn't offer to
help. She and my husband are interested in music. We have a player
piano and they have a good time wJth that and don't care what I do. I when we are alone he talks to me and asks me if I am happy and if there is anything he can do to make me happier. I have not said anything about the other girl yet, because I
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don't want him to know how jealous I am, but it breaks my heart to see them together. After working hard all day taking care of my home and my babies I want to enjoy my husband lust a little in the evening. Some
times I eet desperate. What would
you advise me to do? GLORIA
you are fortunate because your problem can be remedied very easily. Vmir himhand certainly loves you, but
ninvM comDanionshiD which you can
not give hira on account of your chil
dren and the supper aisnes. Have the children undressed before he gets home. If you want to, give them their supper and put" them to bed, but at least arrange it so that they will not keep you from your
husband after your supper is over.i Probably the children will object to thi rrnaement. because children
are such Uttle tyrants. You will be justified in bribing them to be good. Give them a penny or a piece of candy when they are good and deprive them of something they want very much when they are naughty. Leave your supper dishes until tho next morning. Then you can be with your husband during the evening and enjoy the player piano with your husband and the other girl. You are right in not showing jealousy. It would be a great mistake.
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JSy MIW. M ORTON
It tight and let it boil for five minutes. The time is just up, so now you may watch the rest of the process." He took off the cover of the saucepan, stirred its contents, added a cup of cold water and then, again covering It, lighted the small warming burner of the gas stove and set the saucepan upon it. "There." he said, with a grandiloquent flourish, "in ten minutes that will be nectar for the goddess." He bowed to me extravagantly.
But one thing troubled me. "Did you say you put anegg shell into the
coffee?" I asked.
"Sure,' Dicky replied. "There's the
egg In that dish. Don't know much about cooking, excent chafing dish
stunts, but I can manage an egg."
"No, I don't want anything but the coffee and the toast, which we can fix
on the electric toaster In the living room. But " "But what?" Dicky looked at me keenly. "Something's on your mind. Better get it off." "Did did you wash the egg before
'you put the shell in?"
Over Dicky's face flashed a startiea
look, a guilty look, it appeared to me. But It was gone in an instant, and be burst into a roar of laughter. The Saving Recollection "So that's what's troubling you. Is It? Well, don't worry any longer. That egg was scrubbed and rinsed and steri
lized and fumigated. It was the most
sanitary object you know when It went into the coffee." A little unreasoning feeling of anger arose in my heart against Dicky. I knew from the look on his face when I asked him about the egg that he was not telling the truth when he said that he had washed it. I could not tell him that he was uttering a falsehood,
Women of America! War may jestroy a little of your comfort. But if we win, your honor will be preserved. If the kaiser wins -you know the fate of Belgium. There is the truth. What can you do? Just do what the United States Food Administration asks you to do. It's not hard, but it is necessary. Eat only as much as you really need. Buy only 3 pounds of sugar per person per month. . You may have as much corn syrup, molasses, sorghum, honev and made syrup as you like.)
Use not more than one pound of
fat ner nerson per week.
Use not more than 2 pounds of meat
Der person per week.
Use cheese, pinto, soy beans,
nuts and fish. Uie up every drop of milk. Give the children whole milk.
Don't use more than 2U pounds of
wheat flour per person per week. Make this amount less if you can
This amount of wheat flour includes
in the world I would rather have and
I can't imagine too many of them. I guess that is about all this time,
Swish" there is so little mat goes on
that I can tell. I am looking forward to your next letter. A Your, friend, . MIGGS."
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the amount you use in bread. AH bread, homemade or baker's, should contain 20 per cent of cereals other than wheat. Use other cereals as much as desired. Don't do any deep fat frying. Don't eat between meals. Don't eat midnight suppers. Don't hoard food. Deny yourself pastry.
Revelations of a Wife
DICKY'S COFFEE RECEIPT I was too curious, however, as to the method by which he made his coffee to go immediately. "I see you don't use the coffee machine," I said. "Wow do you manage in that thing?" "Easy," retorted Dicky. "I put two heaping tablespoonfuls of coffee and an egg shell into this, and poured over it two cups of boiling water, covered
RECEIPT FOR WARDING OFF AGE Fat is commonplace middle agedIt stamps a woman as unquestionably past the period of youth. Hence it lessens her influence. She may charm still by nimbleness of wit but that indefinite fascination a fine figure wields has fled from her. y 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 littleness will increase. The Marmola Prescription Tablet is absolutely noninjurious (being made of the famous fashionable formula Vs o?. 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.
and on the other hand the mere thought of the unwashed egg shell made me feel that it would be Impossible for me to taste the coffee. If be had only told the truth, we could have made fresh coffee. Now I did not know what to do. I mechanically took some cups and plates and silver from my kitchen cabinet and placed them on a tray. , Carrying them into the living room I arranged them on the reading Aable. Then I brought the toaster from the dining room and attached it to one of the light sockets. I was about to start back to the kitch
en for more things when I met Dicky
bearing a tray piled with bread, butter, the sandwiches and ale which he wish
ed for himself, a small pitcher of
cream, a dish With loaf sugar and a larger pitcher containing the coffee. "There," he said as he put down the tray. "I guess here's every little thing you need. Why don't you let me attach that toaster? I suppose I've made a mess in the kitchen, but Katie can clear it up that is, if you don't. Are her for meddling with your lavaliere." As if the mention of Katie's name had been the key to unlock my problem. 1 had an Instant's vivid vision of Katie as she appeared one morning
when I went to the kitchen to . give her an order. She was standing before the sink, industriously scrubbing the eggs which
had just come from tha dealer. "I no like use eggs unless they are wash," she said in explanation. So the egg had been washed after all! '
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Food Expert Predicts Big Future in New Food Products Jean Prescott Adams, Domestic Science Authority, Makes Positive Assertion About Oleomargarine. CHICAGO, March 27. Mrs. Jean Prescott Adams, one of the prominent speakers at the Chicago Patriotic Food Show, when interviewed today, made the following statement: ' 'Although far ahead of the European nations in many lines of industry, we still have many things' to Wrn from them in our kitchen and diningroom modes of living. In direct opposition to our national extravagance. Europe saves millions annually through the use of equally nourishing but far less expensive butter alternatives. "In the highly developed dairy districts of Holland and Denmark they use from ten to fifteen times as much oleomargarine per capita as ' we use here. But the war is teaching us many habits of thrift which heretofore have been neglected and this movement toward national economy is receiving every encouragement from big' food purveyors." Mrs. Adams went on to say that oleomargarine when properly made, either from the fats ordinarily used, or vegetable oils which constitute a new .product in this country, are so thoroughly nourishing and so satisfy ing to the appetite, that they Justly deserve a prominent place on every table, and that what has been considered as a patriotic, measure of necessity will prove of permanent advantage to the country. She explained further that among the big food concerns
Armour and Company bad devoted i
special attention to this subject and in their new products, Veribest Oleomargarine and Nut-Ola, were offering the public products which meet every scientific requirement and should appeal strongly to national taste. -Adv.
Women of Culture
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Garments of Quality are now Ready for Your Selection Our Spring display of Coats, Suits, Dresses and Blouses gives you every opportunity to secure exactly what you want in styles, materials and colors. It will make your shopping easy a real pleasure, if you come and inspect this complete line of Spring models. All the popular materials, in attractive colors, are here. The styles are authorative and pleasing. Workmanship is thorough.
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Suits
For Easter selling we show a very attractive line at SI9.98, $25.00, $27.50 and $30,00. We have suits as low as $14.98. The range from $30.00 to $50.00 are the finest we have ever shown.
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