Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 43, Number 248, 29 August 1918 — Page 5
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, THURSDAY, AUG. 29, 1918.
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JL MRJ. ELIZABETH THOMPSON
Doar Mrs. Thompson: I am a girl icventeen years old. I hare never Seen allowed to "go wltn boys" until lust a few months ago. Since then j have never thought It very wise to let only one boy come to see me. But there Is one young, man whom I :iko better than any of the others. Ho Is about twenty-nine. He has leemod to like me very well, but toSay I learned that about the only Palling this young man has Is making girls think he loves them when ho does not, or at least seems not to do so. For about the last twelve years he has been going with girls. He did the same In each case. He would go with the girl for a long time, sometimes two or three years, then sud
denly he would drop her Just when Bhe thought the world of him. ' I do not love him, but who can tell If I. would after a time. Do you think I should stop now before it should be too late? I like this man best of all my friends and It would be eery hard. BILLIE. A man twenty-nine is too old for a girl seventeen. He is so much more sophisticated than you that it is no wonder you enjoy him more than the rest. I think you should give him up, not because you may fall in love with
him, but because he is too old for you. You are right In going with several
boys and not only one.
Dear Mrs. Thompson: I am thirtythree years of age and am going with
a man who is forty, we nave Deen
eolne together for fifteen years and
he has never asked me to marry him
When I make a remark about some of
our friends who have been married
within that time he always says they
are In too much of a hurry. He al
ways tells me to take things easy
we have plenty of time to be married. My friends tell me he never intends to marry me. Do you think a man should keep a woman out of the way of some good man who might
have married her and earns gooa
NEW FLOUR RULES
ARE RECEIVED
H. W. Gilbert, Federal Food Administrator for Wavne county. Just re
oiveH now flnnr ml s and regulations
that take effect September 1 All
nthr rules and regulations ItOW In
effect are then cancelled.
Flour mav be sold on the basis of
80-20 in place of 50-50 basis. In other words, 80 percent of wheat four and
20 nerccnt of substitute.
Retail dealers selling wheat flour
must carry in stock either barley flour, corn meal, or corn flour, and with every sale of wheat flour shall sell a combination of one or more of these
proportions of one pound of substitute
tn rach four Dounds ol wneai nour.
No dealer can force any other sub
stitutes In combination upon the consumer and the substitutes must conform to the standards fixed by the administration. Substitutes mav be sold in combina
tion with standard wheat flour in lieu
GIRL SWIMMING STAR HARD TO FOLLOW; SHE WEARS CAMOUFLAGED BATHING SUIT
v7 wMii m iiirA Trt nnvn vmi pivk
me some good advice, as I am alone In ! of all barley flour, corn meal, or corn
the world EDYTH.
You are the victim in a case of supreme selfishness. No man should go with a woman years without marrying her. Even If there is no engagement people always think such an affair serious and other men stay away. Give the man up now. He will miss your companionship and deserves to. It Is not too late now to make other men friends if people understand that you have given up this man indefinitely.
ouLfetiold
SX. M HiTm M ORTON
BREADS. Wheatlesa Brown Bread Two and one-half cups sour milk, one-half cup New Orleans molasses, one heaping
teaspoon soda, two cups cornmeal.
yellow corn meal, one teaspoon baking soda dissolved in a little warm water, salt small handful raisins. Mix with sour milk. Pour mixture in a covered can and cook in a kettle of
flour, of the consumer so demnd3 at the same rata, namely, rice flour, oat flour, buckwheat flour, potato flour, bean flour, sweet potato flour, kaffir flour, milo flour, feterita flour. Rye flour or rye meal can be sold as a substitute in proportion of two pounds of rye with three pounds of wheet flour. These rules apply to the farmer as well as to the city and town people. Licensed millers, wholesalers and bakers can now have a sixty day's supply of flour. There are no limitations as to the amount of flour which may be sold to a customer at a single purchase.
Cambridge City, Lad.
one cup barley flour, one-half cup of j boiling water for four hours.
raisins or currants, salt. Steam one
hour, then place in oven and brown. This makes two Rood loaves. Old-Fashioned Muster Gingerbread 'One cup molasses, two tablespoons butter, one tablespoon soda. dissolved
in throe tablespons hot water, one
War Bread Water from boiled po
tatoes, about one quart, two cups of
mashed potatoes, one tablespon of
Mrs. Daisy Metterts and son re visiting Shelby ville relatives Mrs. Clifford Oldham is visiting relatives at Austin ( O Mrs. Anna Conrad has taken a position at Will Hunt's grocery Mr. and Mrs. O. U. Toppin spent Sunday at Geneva, Ind Mr. and Mrs. Kahl of Columbus, O., is visiting Mrs. Viola Roth Mrs. Frank Parson will spend a few days with her sister, Mrs. Laura Richie and
her mother, Mrs. Mary Hineman.
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JEANETTE RANKIN
LOSES III RACE
CBr Associated Press) HELENA. Mont.. Aug. 29. Com-
nlt returns from 882 precincts or
1.403 In the state received early to
day showed that In the state-wide pri
mary Tuesday Dr. (J. M. anasirum
polled 15,249 votes In the race for the
nomination of the republican ucKei ror
U. S. senator. Miss Jeannette Rankin, congresswoman from Montana,
seeking the same nomination, received
12,128 votes; Harry Parsons or Mis
soula, 4,497, and Edmund rsicnois.
3.209.
sugar an done of lard, one and one-! Mr. and Mrs Rollln Kirkwood and son
or i.oneee corner, w.. oucui a ion
half cakes yeast softened in lukewarm water. When water is cool add
j one cup wheat flour and yeast cakes,
teaspoon ginger. Add flour to make j let raise over night, covered to keep
dough, which may be kneaded, but not too hard. Roll into sheets, mark with
a fork, bake quickly. While hot, mix a tablespoon hot milk with a like amount ofmolasses and wet the top. Popovers One-half cup wheat flour, one cup milk, one-half cup rye, one half tablespon salt. Beat three eggs, add the milk and beat. Sift the salt with the flour, add the rye and flour sifted together. Pour into hot, well greased popover cups and bake in a hot oven for nineteen minutes; lower the temperature and bake thirty-five minutes longer. Remove at once from the cups. Boston Brown Bread One cup molasses, two cups rye meal, one cup
warm. Hot cusnion may De used to set crock on, cover up with a piece of clean old blanket. Bread Two cups corn flour scalded with one quart boiling water or more to make smooth paste, three cups barley meal cooked. When cool add two cups corn starch, two cups rye flour or graham flour, three quarts wheat flour, two level tablespoons of salt In one cup of warm water, add to yeast. Stir up and add to flours, knead In more flour and starch till stiff. About ' forty to forty-five minutes is the length of time. Set in warm place to raise, knead down, raise again, mold in loaves, raise and bake. This "makes seven loaves.
THlrSTRUGGL
B r C K L E
A FEMININE ORGY Edith Ferrol awoke with a feeling of elation she had not known since the day she had gone shopping for her wedding finery, nine years before. From the depths of the heavy sleep she had fallen into at daybreak her consciousness rose gradually to the light. It was a golden light. It was the light of Fortune's smile. Edith remembered the cause of her happineaa John's windfall In the stock market! 'With singing heart and glowing eyes she did her morning work about the house, saw to the breakfast, got the children off to school, and ordered the day's provisions. As she asked the price of this and that article of
food Edith could hardly keep rrom seizing the shopman by the lapels of his linen duster and shouting gleefully, "For once, you old robber. I don't care! Ask as much as you like for your potatoes and oatmeal and eggs! I'll pay; I've got money lots of it! I won't have to apologize for delays. Send vour bill; I'll settle when you like. We're rich, rich, rich. I tell you!" As she walked home she was surprised and a little amused to note how self-respecting she felt She greeted a neighbor gayly coming from the butcher's. She smiled with unusual friendliness at meeting the land
lord in the hall. She glanced at herself In a mirror and skipped a heartbeat as she saw how youthful her face loked. Her step was light. She caught herself humming as she made ready for the shopping trip with Lillian Blake. For the first time in all her life Edith Ferrol entered a department store with a sense of reedom to buy. Even the orgy of her trousseau, while exhilarating, wa3 restrained by a modest purse. For nine years she had never once bought half a dozen pairs of stockings for the youngsters or for herself without figuring on the lowest
possible price and wondering if, after nil. she couldn't make four pairs do. Rut now she could spend! She could buy quality instead cf shoddiness. Quantity instead of hand-to-mouth niblets, than which she well knew there is no more costly method of purchase. Thus do the poor pay the highest price for everything. First, because goods in small quantities cost more, pecond. because the short life of poor
days with Mr. Kirkwood's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Kirkwood Russel Crocket Is home from college at Valparaiso..'. Mrs. Babcock who has Mary Garven who has been at Martinsville has returned Misses Florence been quite ill is Improving Miss Reynolds, Helen Close, Bertha Marpie, Edna and Myrtle Waddell attended a surprise party, given Tuesday evening at the home of Miss Fannie Davis of Hiser Station An airplane landed in a field south of Dublin
Tuesday toward evening, on account
of the rain. The aviators put up all
night at Cambridge while a few of tne militia boys guarded the plane Jeff Kirkwood who has been ill for some time is not much improved Dr. J. E. Wright and Mrs. Wright were Richmond visitors Tuesday...: Mrs. Charles Lowery and two sons of Richmond have moved to Cambridge, into the west half of Mrs. Charles Routh property on West Church street Dr. Harris and family of Tulsa, Okla., are the guests . of Meriman Straughn and family.
materials necessitates buying often. "Now, let yourself go. my dear." urged Lily Blake, "and take advantage of luck when it comes your way. Loosen up. Buy a regular outfit all you and the kids'll need for the next six months." "Dear me. Lily, you talk as if we were going to live on a desert island
and wouldn't have a chance to nuy anything for love or money once we get there! I feel guilty spending so much of John's earnings all at one time." "Say, listen, Ede, this dough isn't exactly earnings it's profits. Earnings is well enough to be economical with: but profits are different. Take
'em while you got 'em. and spend 'em quick," replied Lil Blake, the wise. Edith felt vaguely uncomfortable at Mrs. Blake's advice. It seemed to corroborate certain doubts that stirred deep below the surface of her delight. But the spell of spending was upon her. The warm, bright store, the eager saleswoman, the handsomely gowned shoppers, the treasure-trove displayed on every counter, the tempting placards. "Reduced to $12.50"; "Manufacturers' samples, odd pieces sacrificed at one-third valuo"; "Special sale, today only, $19.75. were $25" all these things wove a web of weakness about Edith Ferrol.
Woman's natural orgy is spending. Comparatively few women know the intoxication of earning. They all know the thrill of turning mere bits of
paper and gold into things of adornment or usefulness or comfort. If love is woman's primal need money is her
second!
"Now, come on, child," brisked Lil
New Trial to Be Held
in Case Against Stern
Will W. Reller has been appointed sueclal iude. for the retrial of the
case against Charles A. Stern for
practicing medicine without a license.
Sterns filed an aitldavlt lor a cnange
of Judge. The case was first tried in July but the jury disagreed. The new trial is set for Sept. 4. Immediately after the retrial another trial will be
held on a new charge of practicing medicine illegally at a later date.
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AMY HORTON OVERSEA8.
Miss Amy Horton daughter of MrsBelle Horton of North Ninth street, has arrived at a French port with the Overseas Theater Company. .
CHESTER, IND.
Mr. and Mrs. Will Kerline of Indianapolis, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Harvey of Richmond and Mrs. Alice Graves visited Wm. Morrow and family Mrs. Michael Kendall received word Sunday evening that her sister. Miss Nora Ryan of Richmond fell Sunday and broke her left hip Merrell Huddelson left for training camp Monday Nelson Hunt is on the sick list Miss Lucile Huffman spent Saturday night and Sunday with Morton M. Mahan and family in Richmond. .... Mrs. Mary Vornauf and son Harry end Miss Marjorie Huffman visited the former's sister at Dublin Sunday. Frend Brown purchased a new
Allen car last week.. ..A number of persons from here are attending Chautauqua at Richmond Misses Nellie Morrow and Edith Hampton attended the dance given for the soldiers at Glen Miller last Thursday night. . . . Luther Hinshaw and family spent Sunday with Muneie Ewbanks and family at their camp at the Richmond Chautauqua Charley Huffman has bought the George Davis farm... Miss Adelaide and Alfred Kemp spent last week with their grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. William Morrow Relatives from Parker, Ind., are visiting Albert Hood and family.
Unsightly Hair I)r Miracle, tfco rtffloal raafterr lipoid, is trnlr revclatlM la o4era demee. It Is Just as ettleaelaas far cmvtaff emmrm . arUtlr sroavtaa aa It 1 for araftaary ran. Oaljr seaalaa De Miracle fcaa a ftoaer-baek guarantee la each aackaare. At toilet craatcn la Me, SI 3 aUea. or by aal treat aa la plala wrapper aa roeelpt of price. FREE w,tk teatlaaaatala of J at beat aal aerifies espial as what eaaaea kalr oa face. Berk and arm", war It faeeasea ad bow PeMlraele aevitaltaca It. atatle la plala scale earelea aa resaest. De.Mlracle. Park Ave, aaa lZtoa St Naiv York.
CULVER
Milk
It's Pure Tuberculin Tested Bottled under absolutely sanitary conditions Pasteurized Milk that's all milk Delivered before you are up or any time you care to order it. Just phone 1531. CULVER DAIRY 610 North D St.
Miss Lenore Bates.
Miss Lenore Bates, one of the expert swimmers at Atlantic City has introduced a novelty on the beach. She wears a camouflaged bathing suit. Probably she hopes it will make her invisible to the sharks.. And maybe she figures on swimming far out where the U-boats are lurking.
Pennsy Railroader Dismissed
For Wreck Reinstated hy U. S.
There's joy In a railroader's home In Richmond today. Even if the husband and father Is fighting with the engineers in France, the wife and mother now believes every cloud has a silver lining. Two years ago Carl Christy. Pennsylvania railroad engineer, was dismissed because of a wreck west, of the railroad bridge avross the Whitewater river.' The government has ruled that he Is to be reinstated and that wages due him from the day he was dismissed until the day he enlisted be paid. This amounts to the tidy sum of $3,700. Christy enlisted with the engineers and is "somewhere in France." His family resides here. His wife had not received the check today but she
knows that Unelc Som will send it. Conductor John Falck, also dismiss
ed because of a wreck, was ordered
reinstated by the government board
He is owner of a fruit store in New
castle. Under the ruling he hai thirty days in which to decide whether he
will return to work. No back, pay was
awarded him.
GIVE UP BUILDING PLANS.
NEW YORK. Aug. 29Plans of the New York city school authorities to
provide educational facilities for 300,-
000 additional pupils, were abandoned today as a result of a decision by the
war industries board yesterday to
prohibit the construction of new school
buildings during the war.
Seriously, now, since the Invention
of the watermelon no man has done
more than Ford to add to the pleasure and mortgages of mankind.
il aaaaaaaaaaaaaaa mm -aaa I
Blake, the light of generalship in her
eye; "let's start at the hat department
and work down. I saw some darling copies of French models, only $14.98. Get a smart hat, or two and you're on the road to being well-dressed. The hat makes the woman. Then we'll see about a tailor suit. I'd have one made if I was you, but if you want it quick you can get one of those duvetyn or bolivians for about seventy-rive and have the tailor do you a really good one later." Edith had never spent more than $45 for a suit in her life, but she bought one of the "duvetyns" wUh scarcely a quiver. That night the Ferrols' apartment looked like th1 package room of the Hotel Ritz. Edith was a little frightened at the array. What would John say when he saw. it? (To be continued.)
How to Acquire Hair Beauty
You 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 row ready. Just pour a little at a time on the scalp and hair until both are entirely covered by the Htiintilv Derfumed rrenaration that
thoroughly dissolves and removes J every bit of dandruff, excess oil and dirt. After rinsing the hair dries j
miicklv with a flufflness that makes
It seem heavier than It is, and "takes j on a rich luster and a softness that makes arranging it a pleasure. Adv.
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eek-End Shoe Sale
TOMORROW AND SATURDAYYour Last Chance We are offering all Early Fall styles in novelty and staple High Lace Boots for ladies at just about one-half price. This lot consists of all the new colors and styles in high lace novelty boots, in Goodyear welts, hand turned soles and McKays. Included in this lot we have 200 pairs of ladies' white kid 9 and 1 0-inch lace boots with Louis heels and black kid with white tops.
$5.00 Ho $7.50 Values
TEE RMLR0AP STORE 8th and N. E. Sts.
A few of our special offerings for Friday and Saturday only
SKIRTS
PLEATED SKIRTS Pleated Skirts in all the newest AO shades, at PVO
SOL SATIN SKIRTS Black only, Newest styles. Specially Q AO priced at tpU.iO
SUITS
NEW FALL SUITS Newest shades and styles. $35.00 val- fl)7 PA
at mmi mJJ
ues
All-Wool Poplin SUITS Navy and Black only $30.00 val- (POO ues at n.tlU
WAISTS Georgette Blouses, all Crepe de Chine Blouses shades, newest styles in all shades at at $4.98 $2.98 MILLINERY VELVET TAMS PATTERN HATS In newest shades Velvets, newest shades, $1.95 $6.00 values, $3.98 FURS Newest Stole Collars in all . - -shades, made with belt Genuine I ape box dcarts gSSi.t $7,98 $27.50 value $18.00 DRESSES Wool Serge DRESSES SILK DRESSES Newest Styles $20.00 All shades, very pretty values 1 9 QQ stvIes' $25 M A 7ft at tpJ-mwifUO values at tp LJ I J LADIES' COATS SWEATERS Beautiful Velvet Coats in All wool Slip on Sweaters, all the newest shades sleeveless, all shades Specially $10 AO Specially Qty A priced at . . l-m-dVO priced at ,tP-fU
We are now showing a complete line of Ladies' Misses' and Children's Fall Coats. Come to Our Store. We will be more than pleased to show you through.
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House Keeping Thrift
You Are Practicing Real Thrift When You Save Needless Work
You waste time wKen you clean, dust and polish floors and woodwork the old way. That is three operations. r ... With the O-Ccdar Polish Mop you do these three things at one time. In addition, your floors are cleaner, briehter and prettier than ever before. As you save work, you save time and money. In many homes the O-Cedar Polish Mop has solved the servant problem. In others it pays for itself in the saving of brooms alone.
Collects all the dust and dirt from everywhere and at the same time gives a high, durable lustre. Ask your dealer for the new Battkshtp Model O-Cedar Polish Mop. Your money refunded if you are not delighted with the work h does. Channell Chemical Company . Chicago - Toronto - Londoa
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