Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 43, Number 320, 22 November 1918 — Page 5

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM FRIDAY, NOV. 22, 1918.

PAGE FIVE

lXeaH:tBHome

emu" '

ELIZABETH THOMPSON

Dear Mm. Thompson: I am an orphan girl and- have always had a hard time of it. In school the teachers always nagged at me. I could not get my lessons. The school children all made fun ot me until It threw me Into a nervous breakdown, and have been nervous ever since. I have been sick for the last twelve years until I am Just miserable. My sister treated mo mean. We always fought, but she was well thought of and the people all blamed me, but ot course I came out all right and she sees her mistake, but it has turned me against her. I have got into the habit of thinking about my past life until it makes my face have a mean expression. Flease tell me some way I can forget my troubles or I will go wild. WORRIED. You must stop worrying about yourself and think about making other people happy. "Life is very generous in its returns for what we put into it." You have been sick so long that you have got into the very bad habit of feeling sorry for yourself. Try loving people for a change. Love your slater and see how quickly she responds. The trouble you and she had was not ne-sided it was partly your fault.

Love and smiles will soon blot out the disagreeable expression. . Pear Mrs. Thompson: I used to go with a fellow who was certainly fina to me in every respect. He was also very much admired by everyone. He used to take me auto riding- almost every evening last summer and then all of a sudden he stopped coming and started to go with another girl. I don't know what I did to offend him. It has been two months since I have heard from him at all. Shall I write or call him up and ask what 4s the matter? . NITA. Do not write or shone him. It is

evident that he became more interested in the other girl or he would not have given you up so completely. Dear Mrs. Thompson: - I have been going with a young lady' whom I admire very much. . One night I had an engagement with her which I wanted to break and lied out of it. This lie has always hurt my conscience. Shall I tell her about it now? OSCAR. , It will hardly be necessary to explain now. It is too late for the truth to help in this case. But never lie to her again.

Household

s JL il H lk V1

LUNCHEON 8ANOWICHE3 nbinatlon Equal parts of dates, i. ns, and figs chopped very fine. Powdered sugar moistened with ,ex tract of vanilla. Beef Rare beef with Worcestershire sauce. Lettuce White bread or rye: mix cheese with mustard and olive oil and finely minced almonds, blanched. Dip leaves of lettuce In oil, puting cheese on loaf. Sponge Cake Slice of sponge cake with grated chocolate with powdered sugar. Capers Two tablespoons capers, three hard-boiled eggs mixed with salad dressing. Graham bread. Prunes One cup mashed stewed prunes mixed with peanut butter and a teaspoon lemon Juice. White bread or pound cake sliced thin.

Oyster Finger rolls, split, filled with oyster sauce. Oyster sauce: parboil one pint oysters, drain and use oyster liquor in mixing one-half pint of drawn butter sauce; season with celery salt; cayenne pepper; add the oysters, chopped fine, cook two minutes. Serve warm or cold. - Raisin White bread, buttered, put layer of seeded raisins and add onehalf peanut on each raisin, or layer of peanut butter. Onion Minced Spanish onion mixed with minced ham, with mustard sauce. Rye bread. Cheese Butter Beat ' one-half cup butter, six tablespoons dry sharp flavored cheese, one teaspoon mustard, one teaspoon anchovy paste or sauce, two teaspoons Worcestershire; spread between slices of buttered bread.

BELGIAN RULER ENTERS BRUSSELS

(By Associated Presa) LONDON, Nov. 22 King Albert and the Belgian government, left Bruges Thursday and were expected to make official entry Into Brussels at two o'clock this afternoon, according to an Exchange Telegraph dispatch from Brussels. Belgian troops and gendarmes reached the capital yesterday and restored quiet The newspapers resumed publication and flags are flying everywhere in celebration of the return of the king. . Some of the administrative services of the government resumed their functions in Brussels Thursday evening. King Albert will re-open parliament today immediately after he reviews the troops. The new Belgian ministry, the dispatch adds, will comprise six Catholics, three Liberals and three Socialists, including the Socialist leader, Edouard Anseele. Premier Cooreman will retire. Baron de Broqueville will

be minister of the interior, and General Janson, minister of war. M. Hymans will retain the portfolia of foreign affairs, and Emile Vandervelde will continue as minister of Justice.

The Forum

(All articles for this column must not exceed 100 words. Contributors must sign their names, although the name will be withheld by the management at the request of t writer. Articles having no nam attached will be thrown Into the waste basket.) v

TO THE PEOPLE OF WAYNE COUNTY

The undersigned United War Work Campaign committee solemnly addresses this communication to every man, woman and child In Wayne county on a question which affects the 'honor of us all. Our reputation as

a community for fifty years to come is involved. The following townships have rais

ed their quotas of the present War Fund Compalgn: City of Richmond, Boston township, Clay township, Perry township and Washington township. The following townships have not raised their quotas of the fund: Ab- ' ington, Center, Dalton. Franklin, Green, Harrison, Jackson, Jefferson, New Garden, Webster, Wayne. Are the people of thes townships going to turn their backs on their plain duty? We do not believe so. We believe that the people of these townships are Just as loyal to our country and as faithtful to our brav soldier boys as the citizens who have already done their Just share, and have only failed to raise their quotas because the justice of the cause and 1 the gravity of the situation has not been properly presented. Citizens, the honor of your township is Involved, and your good names for years to come are concerned, and very deeply concerned. These brave soldier boys, Just in the flush of manhood laid aside opportunity, surrendered the joys and comforts of home and fireside, tore themselves from the Moving embraces of friends and crossed the seas to fight In foreign lands for human liberty. Sublliner courage was never manifested nor more heroic suffering ever endured in all the annals of the world. Out of Ko Mun's Land, where death 1 M-! T1 1 tViof MOW ttlOU

fought for the deliverance ' of the ,"world. and won. While we were safe

at home they were enduring ail or tne miseries of a soldier's life in the trenches. While we at home were getting fine prices for our products, they were fighting and bleeding and dying for us, and drawing the pitiful sum of $1 a day for their services. Citizens of Wayne county, a very solemn duty IS here laid on your consciences. For the sacrifices our brave heroes have made for us. you are asked to contribute enough to provide them at least some of the comforts of home. How can we ever publicly welcome these boys back home if we fail thtm? Even the thought of such

a thing Is unbearable. No township in this county must have this stain . upon its name. We MUST, we WILL raise every

dollar of this fund. Hundreds of

citizens have visited the Committee Rornis and implored us to continue our efforts. They have begged us "to name the slackers out" First, we are going to await the result of this appeal, but backed bythe overwhelming sentiment of the people' of Wayne county, we are going to see that every single man does his full duty or name him out and hold him up to the scorn of his neighbors and his country. We are going to stay on this Job till every dollar of this money Is raised. At the end of this campaign a list

of citizens and amounts given will be published in the daily papers. Yesterday the employes, mind you, the workingmen of the Miller-Kemper company, already generous givers, hearing of our extremity, phoned headquarters to double their subscriptions We appeal to every citizen to measure up to that splendid example of patriotism and devotion to a cause as holy as was ever laid on the hearta of men. We , appeal for a generous response, and should it not be forthcoming, the responsibility wlU.'.be publicly placed where it belong3.- We expect every township to raise its quota and every man to do his duty. , Geo. H. Eggemeyer, Secy. J. M. Lontz, Chairman. J. H. Harrington, Jr., W. H. Romey, Executive Committee.

President Wilson has decided to go

to Europe to attend the opening session of the Peace Conference and expects to sail for France soon. Various distinguished Americans have been sighted to accompany him, among them Judge Bradie, Ex-president Taft, Elihu Root and others. These names have been quoted by the press closely in touch with the administration. It seems strange that the name of Colonel Theodore Roosevelt is not among them. And yet, what could be more fitting or " logical than to send to the conference one of our most talented and most popular men. Surely the president is broadminded enough to overcome the prejudices of the small fry of the Democratic party and by naming him dispell once for all the prevalent impression that the former president has been purposely kept in the background during the war. .. The grave of Quentin Roosevelt is in France and the father may visit it while there. Colonel Roosevelt has by deed and word proven his devoDo YOU want Clothes that Dazzle?

Camden Goes Over in

War Work Campaign It's SO easy

CAMDEN, O., Nov. 22. Camden and Somers township went ' over the top'' in the United War Work campaign on schedule time last Monday, subscribing $5,036.25 on a quota of $4,950. The heaviest contributors were-r-David Kenworthy, J. Collet & Son and the Eikenberry Bros. Co. The subscription in Camden was $2,926.00 and in the township, $2,110.25.

CHILD DIES OF DIPHTHERIA

HAGERSTOWN. Nov. 22 Margaret

Hole, six years old, died of diphtheria after an illness of one week at the home of her grandfather, William

Hoover, of this county. Funeral ser-! vices will be held from the lawn Sat-!

urday afternoon, and burial in the Brethren cemetery.

A single trial package of Rod Gross Ball Blue will convince you that never be. fore have you known true happiness at the end of the day. White? why it gives your clothes a whiteness that even the fleeciest clouds cannot rival. Don't Watt, Don't DoubtGet It Use it and KNOW S Cents. At GOOD Grocery Stores

A

4

STHtWA

There U no "cure but relief Is often brought by

Your BOCiVCi-arrl"S3?

NEW PRICES 30c, 60c, f 1,20

J

BRIEFS

The Independent Ice & Fuel Company have for sale West Virginia Double Screened Lump and Mine Run, Ohio Jackson Lump, Brazil Block, ind the best Indiana Coals. Phone 3465.

Quinine That Dots' Not Affect Head Because of its tonic and laxative effect. LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE (Tablets can be taken by anyone with- ' out causing nervousness or ringing in 1 the head. There is only one "Bromo Quinine." E. W, GROVE'S signature on the box. 30c

!

Men's Special, ' WIMTEK Umdlcpwcar 100 Dozen Men's Two-Piece Underwear In extra heavy Standard white back flat fleece Shirts and Drawers and "Hanes" heavy ribbed needle elastic knit-Shirts and Drawers to match. All sizes. These standard brands of Underwear are worth today at least $1.50 the garment

Our price fer (S)(o The

Tine Rmkmi Store

8th and North E Streets.

Richmond, Ind.

tlon to our great country. The recognition that he has received during the entire period ttf the war Is hardly likely to stimulate the young generations

in the belief that republics are grate

ful. Send the Colonel to the confer

ence, Mr. .President. We need the best brains we can obtain to represent this country and there's room

enough at the table for two big men. J. B. HORWITT.

RAEMAEKER CARTOONS. No matter whether one has been dipped by Thetis Into the river Styx, the arrow of eatire or ridicule will always pierce the vulnerable heel. Other arrows may glance aside, but the shaft that is tipped by "the bitter wit, the terrible strength of irony," finds all of us susceptible to its sting. Therefore, the former German emperor and his adherents, must have felt keenly those arrows which sped from the quiver of Raemaeker. Even the ludicrous and bombastic Falstaff has been made to lend his aid to a shaft of wit by stepping down from the pages of King Henry IV and telling anew the story of how he fought against the men in buckram. As war was anciently proclaimed in Britian by sending messengers in different directions through the land, each bearing a bended bow, so Louis Raemaeker with his remarkable war

cartoons which appeared in the London and Paris papers became truly a messenger of strength to the allies. With such weapons in his hand, what marvel that his pictures "of tragedy and pathos, of comedy and satire, awoke the wrath of the German government. Among the one hundred and twenty-five of Ftaemaeker's war cartons now on exhibition at the art gallery, it is difficult to tell which pictures impress one the most. Certainly the most striking include those portraying the Hun's derision of the Christ, the "Handwriting on the Wall," the "End of Serbia," the "Last Ride" with its Dante-like effect, the female figure in!

the "Spring-song," whose lines of shape and drapery are so harmoniously and exquisitely drawn that they seem to have rhythmical expression, and then as a final mention that wonderful picture which shows the face of Christ in the heavens gazing down on the figure of him whom the world hopes is the last of his dynasty. This drawing bears in French an inscription of sombre simplicity which rendered into English reads: "But when the voice of God called him he saw himself alone upon the earth in the midst of phantoms sad and without number." KATE V. AUSTIN.

Robert Leighton, age 4 eighty-seven, some time ago made his yearly trip to the town clerk's office at Randolph, N. H-i to obtain a hunting license.

COUGHSAND colds Dr. King's New Discovery has a fifty year record - behind It a It built Its reputation on Its production of positive results, on its sureness la relieving the throat irritation of colds, coughs, grippe and bronchial "Dr. King's New Discovery? Why. ray folks wouldn't use anything else!' That's the general nation-wide esteem in which this well-known remedy is held. Its action is prompt, its taste pleasant, its relief gratifying. Half a century of cold and cough checking. All druggists. 60c and $1.20. Bowels Out of Kilter? That's nature calling for relief. Assist her in her daily duties with Dr. King's New Life Pills. Not a purgative In the usual dose, but a mild, effective, corrective, laxative that teases the bowels into action. 25c.

Were Tb Sst

Of V.'cri's

W

Who Knew Tab

Against Suffering.

Before the antral of the Stork, wonso tot over half a century have learned tna wisdom of tiring nature a helping- hand, nausea, nervousness, bearinextown and stratcbior psins la the abdomen sad muscles are entirely avoided by the use of Mother' Friend, according to the testimony pf thousand of mothers who have used this time-honored remedy. Mother's Wend lubricates the One network of nervea beneath the skin, and by regular use during- the period the muscles are made and kept soft and elastic. They can then expand gently and easily when baby Is born and pain and danger at the crisis is naturally avoided. Mother's Friend Is a preparation of penetrating oils and other medicinal agents prepared especially for expectant mothers. It is for external use. is hanlntrlv mnA

shop Id be used regularly during the en tiro

oa oeraro oaor comes. rite to the Brad field Regulator Com.

uepr. a. Ltmir uuiMung, Atlanta, la. for an interestlnr McthrrttonA

Book, and obtain a bottle of Mother's Friend from the druggist. You will find it greatest kind of help.

Se&l

Try Pineapple

9

.art

Jul

Pineapple Is a flavor which

must be sealed

o kee d. We

seal it in a viaL

We ns half a ripe pineapple to make the flavor for one Jiffy-Jell dessert. So you get a wealth of this

delightful taste. Jiffy-Jell comes ready sweetened. .The bottle of flavor comes In the packagev And it costs a trifle. One package makes Instant dessert for sis. There are 10 flavor, but try Pineapple and Loganberry today Order them now. 2 fmekmg fmr 28 Csafs At Yomr Cnemt'm Jiffy-Jell Waokaaha, Wisconsin) m

MAKE 50c BEST WRITING Irtp INK, FOR . . 1VL COLORS: Black, Blue-Black, Royal Blue, Green, Red, Violet-Purple. Send us ten cents and we will mall you one EAGLE INK POWDER with directions enclosed, v Agents wanted (or full or spare time. Can earn from $25 to $50 per week. Will mail full particulars on application. ONE AGENT IN EACH TOWN ONLY. $4.00 will put you in business. EAGLE INK COMPANY Dept 35-A, 111 East Houston Street, New York

GREAT

Garment

Sale Event Continues

The weather this fall has been very mild so far and has -left our Ready-to-Wear Department with a tremendous stock of, Ladies Coats and Suits. Pursuant to our policy of not carrying stock over from one season to another, we started last week with an announcement of a great reduction on Suits. The ladies of Richmond, realizing the many months of cold weather ahead in which to get the service from these garments, and realizing the unusual savings offered by their reduction, have responded with enthusiasm. In order to further stimulate this event we have included our stock of Coats. Below we are Quoting prices on Coats that should arouse the interest of anyone inclined to thrift. We are also including the Savings on Suits.

Extraordinary Coat Specials

Ladies' Kersey Cloth Coats Q A Q Original Price, $12.50; Sale Price.... pU0 Ladies' Coats in Tweeds and Mixtures (Good heavy Coats) Original Price, $15.00 (11 1 OK Sale Price ..... .. ... $.LaJ Ladies' Coats, made of Zibaline and nicely trimmed in Plush and Velvet. Original Price (14 A A $18.75; Sale Price .$li:UU Ladies' Valour Coats in all the popular colors such as Pekin Blue, Burgundy, Taupe, Green and Khaki. These

Coats have large collars of

Fur, for quick sale 1-4 off. $18.75 Coats ....

$20.00 $22.50 $25.00 $28.50 $30.00

and

Plush, Beaver, Cloth

For instance $14.00

Coats $15. OO Coats S17.00 Coats ............ S18.75 Coats $21.00 Coats ,.......$22.50

All other Cloth Coats priced from $32.50 to $85.00 at Large Reduction. We are also showing a large assortment of Black Plush Coats extremely low priced at $25.00, $28.50 and $35.00

WONDERFUL SUIT VALUES

$11.75 Frenc

Ladies' Suits,

French Serge, Navy

Blue and Black, lined with mercerized lining. Sizes up to 44. Now selling as high as $17.75. QOyl fTjr Buys Ladies' Suits, tPar D Serges,.Poplins, Cheviots, Diagonal Tweeds.' Some Wooltex Suits in this lot. Also the staple and new colors. Sizes up to 44. Some now selling at $35.00. '

A fTfTBuys Ladies' Suits, V-l-TCe i t) Serges and Poplins, Navy Blue, Black, Purple, Taupe; sizes up to 46. Some now selling up to $25.00.

For choice of some

of the finest Suits

we have in stock. All the new materials in Navy, Black, Brown, Taupe, Mixtures. Some in this lot now selling up to $45.00.

$33.75

We Make the Sacrifice of ONE-THIRD OFF on all our better Suits now selling at $50.00, $55.00, $60.00, $65.00, $75.00, $85.00 and $90.00. The suits on sale are all this season's garments and backed by our well known guarantee.

See West Window

The Home of Wooltex

.