Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 43, Number 225, 2 August 1918 — Page 5

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. FRIDAY, AUGUST 2, 1918.

PAGE FIVE

Heart jjTHomc

r

- if 11 II II ffll r Bl

2X1 MR. ELIZABETH THOMPSON

Dear Mrs. Thompson: I am a sten-1 Association. Some time when your

ographer and only seventeen years

Old. No matter what I try do to please my mother, she Is never satisfied, and she says she has hated me ever since I was born and I am poison to her eyes. If I was a bad girl I would not blame her for saying these things, but I never go out with any fellows un

less I have permission to do so. When

father has just had his dinner and is in a good humor tell him how unhappy you are and see if he can't do something to make your home life happier. Dear Mrs. Thompson: I am a young married woman. My husband is in France and I have been working some. Last week a married man working in the same place was talking to me. I

I am home I always help with the t did not like to have him approach me.

housework. I really try my best to please her and she is my own mother. Sho tells father all sorts of things and then he scolds me for absolutely nothing. I have nice clothes, a pretty home, and plenty to eat. but I can't stand the way my mother is treating me and unless something is done I am afraid It will drive me mad. Please tell me what I can do, as I ajne the most miserable girl living. IRMA. If your mother wero physically brutal you would have grounds for leaving home, but since you are well provided for and your mother's abuse is a matter of words, you will have to live at home until you are of age.

Then, If you can, live with relatives

and I told him so. He said he loved

me better than he did his wife. I told him he should be ashamed of himself for thinking of me in that way and he should love his wife, for I loved my husband and was going to be true to him. He sent a note by a dear friend of mine and I told her if she was the kind of a girl to want me to go with men while married. I did nat care for her friendship. Did I do right in both cases? BROWN-EYED B. You did right In both cases. If the man continueh to annoy you, tell him

that you will report him to his em

HOUSEHOLD HINTS

CANNING AND PRESERVING Pieplant Butter Five pounds pieplant cut In one-Inch pieces.) four pounds sugar (brown preferred,) two cups weak vinegar, two pounds seeded raisins chopped, two teaspoons ground cloves, one big pinch whole cloves. Put all in kettle at once and boil until a thick butter. Stir to prevent burning. This recipe makes twelve jelly glasses. Indian Pickle Here Is something choice and worth while, as it is now near pickling time: Take two gallons of good cider vinegar, one teacup salt, eight ounces ground mustard, two ounces celery seed, four ounces ginger, four ounces cinnamon, two ounces cloves, three large roots of horseradish (break the roots or cut in small pieces). Mix these ingredients, boil fifteen minutes.

The vegetables can be added from

I Thursday Elijah Hurst who was I operated cn for cancer of the face re

cently at St. Vincent s, Indianapolis, is getting along nicely The .annual picnic of the Milton schoolmates will be held Thfrsday, Aug. 8, at Glen Miller park at Richmond. ... .Mrs. John Murphy had as a guest Thursday, Mrs. Buckley of ConnersviUe Harold Daniels left Thursday to spend the week-end with Indianapolis relatives. ....Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Manlove have been visiting relatives at Paris and Charleston, III Mrs. John Warren spent Thursday with Mrs. Gus Kinsinger Mr. and Mrs. Henry Hess and Mrs. John Ferguson were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Will Floyd of Dublin Thursday Mrs. Will Scott and son Frank Earl and Mrs. Blue were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Jefferson Dalrymple at a dinner given in honor of their son Clarence, who is home on furlough from Fort McDowell, Cal, Walter Higham will be home on furlough over the week-end rom Camp Sherman, Chillicothe, O Miss Barbara Kern and Mrs. Mattie Stover entertained re

cently, Mr. and Mrs. James Pattee and

Automobile Notes

j Examined Oil Tank with There's MafiflC. in

n . If I If . I '

match; tie s in no spit ai

tlmo tn timp nq von ha VP. thpm nnv-

thing that is pickled can be put in: lneo- rianun 01 onnersvme, Miss Cauliflower, string beans, onions I Lols. Pfafflin of Indianapolis and Miss

(should first be parboiled), very small ijUCia Ianim i exas cnaries E.

uui-c, wuu luiiueny liveu in lumon, and who enlisted at Cincinnati in an ambulance corps, is a German prisoner at Giessen Mr. and Mrs. Benton Wissler and Mr. and Mrs. Park Man-

love are spending a week at Lake

onions, gherkins, nasturtium seeds, green grapes, tiny tomatoes, small cubes of ripe cucumbers. Take a three-gallon crock, put a plate and a weight on to keep the

pickles under. This will keep a year

ployer. Then if he does not hehave by straining the vinegar on a couple Wmecif rarrv nut vnur threat it of times and letting it come to a boil.

let cool and pour over picKies

would also be well to have your father (if you have a father living) warn

or at the Young Women's Christian him not to annoy you again.

7f HitleMotaff

SlSS

3

JEANNE

against the walls of the stuffy room

and dio away without penetrating to any one who might be beyond. She somehow flung ofl the man's hot hand from her arm and dashed for the door leading to the shop. But he blocked her way, altering his manner suddenly to one of utmost suavity. "I pray you, madamolselle. do not a child," hes miled. "You need not fear. You aro American, yes? You do not understand. I am Dufranne! I am artist in women!" He. bowed low, hand on breast, ingratiating u:iile on lips. Sally shrank back still farther, but kept her eyes unfalteringly upon his face, her cars alert for any sound beyond the room and she thought she had heard a sound, very faint, as of a board creaking under a stealthy foot outside the door. Dufranne did not appear to hear it. He came nearer, still t-miling, but not touching her. "You do not understand," he repeated. "You cry out. That Is not the way. No one will come. We are nil friends here together Jeanne and Caspard and Bel-

lotte and tho old Matbllde and I Duf

too eick to go to war, are not too old and too sick to make love to another woman the first pretty face that crosses your path, eh?" She put her hands upon her slender hips and wagged her head at Dufranne, who backed away, she following. "Embusaue! Sale embusque! Cow

ard that you are what a fool I was i will ferment.

to look at vou! Yes. yes

shoulders, droop the eye, make 4hegar fjoni dying.

hand tremble it is too late! You de

ceive no one now. I listen at the door. I watch through the hole. I see and I hear. What is this girl, I demand! Why is she here? Send her away this moment before I call the gendarmes! You will make a fool of me, will you? Jeanne who stoops in pity to the 'old one'! You shall live in ease while my man, my Rabouche, dies like a dt Rabouche, whose boots you are not fit to touch! Open that door, I tell you, and bid this woman go, or I will I will "

then

again. ' -4

bucumner aaiaa lweive cucumbers and three onions, slice as for table use; let stand in salt water four hours," drain off and add one pint of vinegar, one cup of ground pepper,

I mustard, ginger, one teaspoon of grain

mustard seed, one stick of cinnamon. Boil fifteen minutes and can. Beet and Cabbage Pickle Chop one quart boiled beets, add one quart finely chopped cabbage, one cup grated horseradish, one cup su?-r, one teaspoon black pepper, c- fablespoon salt. Cover with coil -egar; salt in fruit jars. Pickles (Tested twenty years) One gallon sorghum molasses, four gallons soft water, one pint hop yeast. Mix one day before using. Wash cucumbers, put them in from

day to day, stir well every time. They j

When through workjng, ;

EARLHAM FALL TERM OPENS SEPT. 24

Registration for the fall semester of Earlham college will begin September 24. A normal attendance is expected, according to President Edwards, in spite of the war. Dr. Markle has been appointed head both of the department of Zoology and Botany, with Miss Mildred Nothnagle of Indiana University as assistant. Dr. Markle takes the Zoology work also as a result of the vacancy caused by Dr. Binford who has been called to take the presidency of Guilford college. Samuel B. Garten, who was to have been in charge of an enlarged music department, has beop granted a leave of absence to enter national service.

At least one business man in Boston is thankful to the motor car and a country wood lot for preventing a complete shut-down of his business during the New England coal famine. For the wood was transported to his factory over country roads, through deep snow, at a time when he had no coal and could get none. When he found himself actually face to face with the alternative of buying wood or stopping business, this man made inquiry and learned that Boston coal yards held their wood at

$14 to $16 a cord. Even so, none had j

a truck or tearu avaiiame ior immediate delivery of wood. Then it occurred to him that last falL while driving his car along the road from Boston to Worcester, Mass., he had noticed a large wood lot, with great quantities of chopped wood piled up. By a bit of telephoning he got in touch with the owner, who was perfectly willing to sell any amount of his wood at $S a cord, but had no other means of shipping than to sled it to the railroad. This plan was impossible because of the element of time; and when the business man suggested motor trucks, the woodsman said that, in his opinion, the snow was too deep in the woods for a motor truck to get in, much less get out with a load. However, the business man declined to tke his word for the difficulty, and began consulting motor truck authorities. He found none who cared to tackle the job until he phone C. S. Henshaw. Mr. Henshaw was so confident of the ability of Dodge Brothers ommercial car to go anywhere that he was willing to send out as many as were needed. The cars readily made their way to the wood lot. There for a time it looked as though the venture was end

ed, for the cars sank in the snow to ',

their axles. But every one pulled through, loaded with half a cord of wood. The entire trip took only part of a day, and the wood was unloaded in the Boston boiler room in ample time to avert a shut-down.

OXFORD, O., Aug. 2. Edward Ir

win, 34 years old, living five miles :

cast of this village, yesterday held a

lighted match at the opening of an oil tank, in order to ascertain how much oil the tank contained. He found out. He,'s in the hospital now, with badly burned face and hands.

WILL DEDICATE CHAPEL

OXFORD, O., Aug. 2. The new Kumler Memorial chapel, Western College for Women, will be dedicated on "College Day," October 15, with appropriate ceremonies. The building, to cost $75,000, is being erected

and furnished by Mrs. Ella McKelvy of !

Pittsburgh, Pa., and Mrs. John C Wight of Montclair, N. J.

TS3

Of T!!2 "fiiiare

A Simple Me&od Thz.t I la a VocJerf si Influence upon TLo I'ut-ra IrifnnU

Red Cross Ball Blue A hundred ywirs ago, the magic, dazzling whiteness it gives to the coarsest as well as most delicate fabrics would have caused its user to be hailed as a witch. To-day she is the envy of her neighbors, at much less labor to herself. Makes clothes beautiful. Buy it try it and you'll stick to it. At all good grocers

Almost Free!

5 Cents

THREE LEAVE FOR DUTY.

bend the 'leave the scum on it will keep vine- 'ss vwuwer wiu remain an-:

j ULLiri JCdl da 1UQU UVIU1 LLL VUV.dl, CtllU

assistant in the French department, i Dr. R. P. Bowen will be head of the

French department.

I

MILTON, IND.

i

At the Granee meetinsr Saturday

meht the following program will be picked out by a

given: Piano solo, Leo Connell; talk, money.

"Construction of Silo, How and When to Build," Paul Caldwell; recitation, Elizabeth Caldwell. The men will serve the refreshments. .Mr. and Mrs. Gus Kinaager and family were recent

guests ojwt ountain vny relatives...

ranne! Tho others will come, maybe, j nung wiae me aoor uiai opeueu iutu yes, but they will only laugh at you. ! the street, and slunk into the shadows

Attendcz, 'moisrlle, be reasonable and

Dufranne will be your friend. See! Am I not a good fellow?" And he struck a dashing attitude, banishing all ugyestion of age and ugliness. He was at the moment handsome in a coarse and terriblo way. Sally would have turned tigress and sprung at hi? eyes with clawing fingers If the had not felt it would be suicidal. She was trapped and helpless. Her pucy violence could avail nothing. She dropped into the chair again and feigned docility while she flogged her crumpling wits into action. "Voila!" smirked the fellow. "That k Ik hrt'er, ma belle. Ah, mon Dieu, tut you arc of a loveliness!" He was

coming toward her again, but on the

irsrant Sally was sure she heard a tiny sound. Yes, and the knob of the door at the other side of the room turned slowly, cautlonsly. She was facing that door. Dufranne's eyes were upon Sally. He saw nothing e'.se; he heard no sound. Sally sat frozen. Without actually fixing her gaze on the door she could see that It opened and a girl stood there. Dufranne, unmindful, went on with his speech: "Of a loveliness that ravishes the soul of Dufranne Dufranne the artist, the lover of " He got no further. Between him and Sally a small figure suddeniy thrust itself, catlike and silent, looking up at him menacingly. "Ha! You are too late with your playacting, my friend!" she cried, snapping her fingers in the fellow's face. "So! You, who were too old and

I

CHESTER, IND.

Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Meyers and Mr. and Mrs. Richard Cutter entertained ' the following persons from Eaton, O., at the!r home here Sunday: Mr. and Mrs. John Duball and family, Mr. and Mrs. Ira Duball and family and Mr. and Mrs. Sam Leedy. . .Ralph Wilson is visiting at Palestine, O., this week. .. .George Worley has purchased the Duffy farm near Richmond... Mr. and Mrs. Michael Kendall visited relatives In Richmond Tuesday afternoon.... Mr. and Mrs. Berry Dill of Palestine, O., spent the last weekend with Harry Wilson and family here... Walter RichJln spent last Sunday at Indianapolis. .. .Mrs. Ellen Davis of Indianapolis was calling on friends here last week.... Mr. and Mrs. Fred Vornauf are the parents of a tenpound baby girl, Alice Marie, born last Friday night. .. .John Jenkins and family of near New Paris are visiting Mr. and Mrs. Henry Cook Mrs. Emma Burg of this place was taken seriously ill Monday while visiting Mr. and Mrs. Amos Black near New Paris. ....Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Burg visited at Fountain City Sunday .... Mr. and Mrs. A. T. Parker of Richmond visited Rev. Ulmer and family Saturday evening The Red Cross society met Wednesday afternoon. Miss Anna Liugh of Richmond attended the meeting and gave instructions in the new sewing. Over 30 pairs of socks have been turned in by the local auxiliary. Relatives from Kokomo, Ind., came Wednesday afternoon to visit Joseph Meyers and family The Ladies' Aid society will give an ice cream supper at the Chester hall Saturday evening, August 10. Everyone welcome.

NEW REGISTRAR ARRIVES

OXFORD, O., Aug. 2. Miss Clara II. Mueller, of Batavla, N. Y., has arrived In Oxford, and has assumed the duties of registrar at the Western College for Women. She will net ao president Boyd's private secretary.

behind the dingy counter.

(To be continued.)

RED CROSS IRONATED HERBS (WITH PEPSIN) If you dont feel well or if you wake up tired and all run down with headache, biliousness, indigestion and feel ail out of sorts, take a bottle of IRONATED HERBS with PEPSIN. Guaranteed tc put you in the pink of condition. This and more than one hundred other Red

! Cross llomodiiio ranrt TVm'Iq Ic ;,.

weeks. Mr. and Mrs Stanley Mur-j guaranteed only by Fosler phy and daughter Dorothy and Bruce Drug Co A.dv Manlove were Newcastle visitors last ' s -

She crept up on him with panther-cti, r.f auu ,.-iii

like movements pressing the coward , meet nex(. Thursday with Mrs John backward and backward toward the M h AU the ladies are urged t0 shop. Suddenly he darted through it,ttpnf1 ns thpr is laree amo,int of

work that must be furnished in a few-

Words, if they are picked out by the

right man, are actions, and if they are

salesman they are

EATON, O., Aug. 2. Three local limited-service men of the 1T47 class left Eaton Friday morning for Syracuse, N. Y., where they will report for duty in the fire and guard service at points of embarkation. They were: Russell Deem, Russell Dalrymple and Joseph Wilson, Jr.

Before the arrival of baby Vnowrmj women for over iialf a ec:;tur' have u.cd witt) rervlar;!y the timo-liouorej preparation, MtiLUer's Friend. Here is a most wonderful orpl'at'on for the abdmca a:id breusta. li. penetrates tho muscle, ligaments a';J tissues, rcrulcrinff them pliant t reailiiy yield to natures demand for eiia,lshjnBy Its nse the anxious weeks of pregnancy ore male comfortable. The u;wfil wrenching strain, bearing-down and stretiUilnff pains are counteracted. Tho system Is prepared far the comir.jr event, a.nl its uce brings rest, repose and happy ,i;;ticJpatin:i. Ey the repulnr vise cf M .t!iars Friend dur!n? tho period the muscles expand easier when t.ahy arrives, and naturally the pain and tlar.cr at the crisis is less. Mother's f riend is prepared after the formula of a ri'.ted family .wtor ly the llradlicld Rc.-rulat; r Co.. A - :13 J.amar Bhler.. Atlanta, (ia. It is for external ue only; is absolute'; and entirely s.ifo and wonderfully elective. AVrito them fr r their instructive and l;.terc-;tnff 'Moihcrht.od Book." There is a wealth of instruction, and comfort to ha derived in rea- 'Ar.g this little book. It is plainly written j;nt what every woman wants to know and v 1;1 be a splendid little t?xt bock of guidance, n:t only fi-r yourself but will mnke ytm helpful to otherx. and in the meantime oltaiu a bottle of Mother's Friend from the druggist, and thus fortify yourself against puin and dis-comfor

EXTRA SPECIALS! for SATURDAY & MONDAY AT Thistlethwaite's SIX CUT RATE DRUG STORES 5 Lb. Box Argo Gloss Starch 43 50c Correspondence Cards 29 3 Cakes Peroxide Soap 25 Use Bio-feren for a tonic and builder for the nerves.

"i

Men of America:

"With the Colors J-JUNDREDS of thousands of 1 1 former PARIS GARTER wearers are with the colors and soldiers don't wear garters. Still the sales of PARIS GARTERS are increasing steadily. Probably due to the fact that the War has changed America from a nation of careless spenders into one of careful buyers.

AVany men have learned the true economy of buying the best even in little things like PARIS GARTERS. Our better grades at 35J5 or more are particularly popular.

ha Aw

IV'

A STEIN & CO. Makers Children's HICKORY Garters

Chicago

This Is the PARIS trade mark

i i ! II

New Yurlj If I m

Jill PARIS -J No mefal I MLcan touch yor

i I f

fr ofl 0 o ! BUSINESS CAR 1 o c 0 0 1 0 There is nothing problematical or exo perimental about the performance H 8 of Dodge Brothers, Business Car. k jj The owner can safely calculate jj jj his cost of operation. x o c 3 o. jj It will pay you to visit us and examine this car. jj 9 9

o o jj The haulage cost is unusually low. y 3 S 0 0 1 NATIONAL GARAGE 1211 Main St. " Phone 2328 f o c I 0 t o I

Advertising m the

Is Mn In vestment Mot Mn Expense

4