Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 44, Number 61, 21 January 1919 — Page 5
PAGE FIVE
THIS K1CHM0ND VALLAUiUM AND SUN-TELEGKAJJfi TUESDAY, JAN. 21, 1919,
if
Heart SfMome
HI
A MRT.ELrlZABETH THOMSON
Dear Mr?. Thompson I am the oldeat child In a family of eight. It haa always been my lot to 'take care of my younger brothers and sisters. . I have had three years of high school education and then had to give up my studies because of my mother's death. When my brothers and sisters havo finished their school work they have pone to work and earned their own living. I have stayed at home and kept house and sewed. When they have gone out in the evening I have had to remain at home working, because I am always so busy. Now I am thirty-five. I will never marry because I have not had a love affair since my . school days. My brothers and sisters tell me that I am a plain old maid. I do not have clothes because my father does not give me enough money to buy pretty things. Usually it Is my lot to wear some cast-off garment of one of my sisters. Two of my sisters are married now. They still look upon me as a servant and when they want to be free from their children they bring them over to me to take care of. I am so tired of my lire and I can't see any chance for a change. I want money of my own and I can't, make my father see that I cbould have It. What shall I do? -nRTHA. You ought to have a change from Hie life you have been leading. After so many years of housework you are
TRESIDpNT'S WIFE; IS ENTERTAINED PY ENCJ IRTT ROCIHT Y YTfTJUN
probably Incapacitated for office work. If I were you I would Insist on having
an allowance in proportion to wnati your sisters are earning, or I would go away for a while and work somewhere j else. You could go to another city . i . 1 . ,i Iran '
ana get a posmor i uuio vhoihu in a private home. This would give you a chance to earn your own money and would give your family a chance to find out how much you were worth ' to them. It does not pay to sacrifice oneself entirely ror duty. If you dress well and have leisure hours your brothers and sisters will care more, for yon. Dear Mrs. Thompson I am having great trouble with a dry scalp and dandruff. I am very much worried about this. I have tried several tonics and they only make the scalp more dry. Can you suggest anything? ' K. H. U Vaseline Is one of the best hair growers and will help to get rid of dandruff and a dry scalp. It depends on the dryness of the scalp how often the vaseline should be applied. Once or twice a week should be often enough. . Make a part straight from the front to the back of the head and rub I he vaseline in thoroughly. He careful not to let it get on the hair itself. When you have finished that part of the scalp, make another part and continue until you have massaged the whole head.
onychoid
MR, MORTON
, ' ' ammmma , . , 4 -v ' i - ' f "N , ,: ' ; Wi "V"'" '":" ' '' "'n nm! &
MAIL PLANE WP.ECKED.
EVAXSVILLE, Ind., Jan. 21 Two aviators surveying aerial mail routes wrecked their machine .near here. Neither'was hurt. "V'-r
3et Rid of That Persistent Cough ftop that weakening, persistent cough ir coli. threatening throat or luoff tffections. with Eekman'a Alterative, he tonic and upbuilder of 20 yeara mcceanf ul use. 0c and SLM bottle
SOME RAISIN RECIPES. Raisin Cream Filling Heat threequarter cup heavy cream until stiff. Poak and dissolve one teaspoon gelatine In four tablespoons milk. When cool, before it thickens, add two or three tablespoons of whipped cream trradually, beatins; constantly, onehalf cup confectioners' sugar and boat wftll into the whipped cream. Add then two-thirds cup seeded raisin: shredded fine (cut with scissors crosswise of raisins) and two table spoons Mncly chopped nuts. Raised Raisin Cake Cream thrce'nrter cup Crisco with one and onoilf cups light brown sugar, add two 11 beaten eggs, two cups well-risen ad sponge, . two teaspoons each .xla and cinnamon, one teaspoon salt, vo cups seeded raisins cut In small l.-'ces and mixed into one cup flour. !fat thoroughly. Turn Into tube cake
pan (or ohling bread pan), cover to rise until light (About three hours) and hake in moderate oven one hour. Hemovc from pan. Cover with cream frosting: Add confectiouorx' sugar to two tablespoons cream until of consistency to spread. California Sally Lunn Sift thre tablespoons sugar, two and one-half teaspoons baking powder and onequarter teaspoon i.alt into two cups pastry flour. Cut one-half cup seeded raisins Into small pieces, mix with one-half cup chopped apple sprinkled with one-sixteenth teaspoon each nutmeg and singer and mix lightly into dry ingredients. Rejit one whole egg and yolk of another until light; add one-half cup milk, four tablespoons melted butter and stir Into mixture well. Divide dough and spread into square layer cake tins and bake in hot oven. Serve hot for luncheon. , -
WIFE OR BUSINESS WOMAN? , Janet Stedman came into her office one morning to find a note on her desk: "Mrs. St.cdman: riease see me at orce. D. Temple." "Madam." began Janet's employer, In the half-humor, mock formal way bh usually addressed her, "prepare yourself for a shock. Two shocks, in fact. I'm going to increase your pay and your work. You know how things have piled up in the office . lately. Why, woman, the Tenement House densttment's actually making history! We are to have a big campaign of 'u'lding and housing reform before V next election. You'll have to whfp reports and statistics. You'll have . he our publicity representative see r Jiorters and all that sort of thing. . ke little trips out of town to keep : i eye on conventions and public etings. Be my other self, in short. "It's up to you if you want it. It 11 mean a let of interesting work f d fifteen dollars a week extra. What f you say?" Temple leaned back In his swivel c' air and watched Janet narrowly. It -is easy to see he was enthused at t ie prospect of the big work, and eager o tackle it. His interest kindled hers. Oh, It would be real work! And a man's pay! A thrill of excitement shot through her at the thought ef her increased usefulness. In a flash she realized that one enjoys life in exact proportion to the degree of use in the world one feels one's self to be. She accepted without further thought. The days that followed were one unbroken rush. Janet was at the office early and late. Often she hadn't time to go out to lunch and had a bite of something sent in which 6he hurrldly bolted, scarcely taking her eyes off her work. She got home at night more dead than alive. Many times 10 and 11 o'clock found her on a train returning from somewhere, or in an automobile, finishing a round of tenement inspections, or coming from some bad fire which had been traced to flimsy construction or Insufficient means of escape. Ilor home was almost a strange country to her. Ono night she didn't get to it at all, but stayed at the office with the commissioner and a committee, going over papers and digging information which had to be used next day. Walter hardly saw his wife. Meals were sketchy or absent altogether, and Katie, the colored woman who came
Left to right. Viscountess Harcourt. Mrs. Curtis Brown. Mrs. Woodrow Wilson and Mrs. Butler Wright.
This is one of the first photographs to arrive in this country showin Mrs. Woodrow Wilson with soidi cf th ELihsn society
women in London. The Viscountess Harcourt. who is standing at the extreme left, was formerly iVhsi Maxy Ethel Lrr of New
York. Mrs. Wilson is wearing one of her "American made" frocks, which is a beautiful piece model witb fur edtd "anel.
WITH THOSE IN ARMY AND NAVY
This column, containing news of Richmond and ..Wayne county boIdiers and sailors, will appear daily in the Palladium. Contributions will be welcomed.
Anton Arnheiter of Camp Sheridan, Ala., has returned to camp following a ten day furlough with his wife at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Heiser or Heiser's Statiou, west of the city. . Raymond Wickmeyer, who has been stationed with the Spruce Timber outfit in Oregon, has received his honorable discharge and arrived home Sunday. - "
A recent letter from Private Alfred
Margaret Voge Dead at West Alexandria , ., t Mrs. Margaret Voge, of West Alexandria, O., died Sunday afternoon at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Jesse Becker, after an illness of three
I months. She is survived by two j daughters, Mrs. Becker and Miss Mary Voge, and a daughter-in-law. Mrs. KmI ma Voge, of Richmond. Funeral serI vices will be conducted from West
Alexandria Lutheran church Wednesday afternoon at 2 o'clock.
every day to do the housework, could not catch "the missus" long enough to ask for soap and laundry money and household supplies. When Janet did get home she was too tired and preoccupied to ask her
husband where he had been or wheth-i
er he bad managed to get anything to eat. or what the day or evening had J
brought forth for him. At first Walt was too proud of his wife's business achievements to think of its domestic drawbacks. But gradually he began to resent the neglect, he was forced to bear. It was one thing to have an intelligent girl for a mate: :i girl with her own interests, her own income, her own realm out of which to bring him bits of business gossip and problems to talk pleasantly over evenings as they sat together. It was quite another thing to find yourself suddenly neither married nor single. Neither companioned nor provided for in matters of food and creature comforts. It was decidedly beastly. Walt told himself. And he hoped to the Lord it wouldn't last long 4 his vuh of duties that had turned his wife into c. whirligig. Janet was too interested to have a clear realization of her own weariness or of Walt's incipient, resentment. That is not till one night when she came home eager to tell him of a splendid bit of "publicity" she had managed to get into the newspapers. And found Walt not there. (To be continued.)
Women's Council Agrees on Industry Bill Changes Changes tbey wish made in tin industrial bill, which was introduced In the house by Representative Oivan. were agreed, upon by the legislative council of Indiana women and Samuel R. Artrnan. chairman of the industrial board. The changes will provide a women's and children's . divi-
nruueit nf Rase . Hosnital 131: writes sion under the. department of inspec-
that he has been seeing sights in the ' tion of buildings," factories and workold world such as are hard for his shops.
eyes to believe
Make The -Laundress Happy
l L
im
m
m
"Had a wonderful hike around Eng-! CAnvd Grinvnld: W Minded ,
land and here in France have seen - . A . wt
in trance, Keturns nome
some great c.ountry.
Campbellstown, Ohio
The Preble County Pamona Grange will meet here on Saturday. Jan. 25 Mrs. Sarah Gard returned here Sunday after a several weeks visit with her daughter, Mrs. Lewis Parker of Dayton. ... ; .Wm. Parker and wife called on Jesse McWhinney and wife Sunday. Mr. McWhinney has been poorly for several weeks from the effects of influenza. . . .Elmer McWhinney, wife and son of near here visited Dan Crumbaker and family at Eaton Tuesday Stanley Hart Is at Columbus attending the state meeting of all county fair boards.
"I have been wearing hip boots for the last three weeks and I certainly need them," writes Corporal Lawrence R. Harrison, who is with -ihe 309th Engineers, Co. D., 84th Division. "We are now in Savenav. France,
by making it possible for hpr to turn out beautiful, snowy white, tlotbes like new. Red Cross Bali Blue will enable the laundress to produce fine, fresh-looking pur white clothes instead of tho greenish yellow usually obtained. RED CROSS BALL BLUE always pleases. 5 cents At all up-to-date grocers.
Don't try to save money buying cheap or big-can Baking Powders. You can't do it You'll throw out more in spoiled bakings than you save on price of the powder. And don't think that old style high priced powders are best because they cost most. They are not. - :QA.Lpi$3Eir s has proved in millions of bakeslay tests that it is
I the best baking powder ever made that's why it is the biggest selling baking powder in the world today. No other baking nnwrlrr tnalrM Mich tetnntinfflv ffood tender
wholesome bakings. No baking powder of anywhere near tbe same quality a sold at such a low price. You use less of Calumet because it is the highest grade baking powder. One teaspoonf ul is equal to two teaspoonfula of most other brands. And there is no "luck" about it when you use CalumeL No loss. It is absolutely are. It is the most economical of alL Millions of housewives use it and so do leading domestic science teachers and cooking experts. Tec save whea yea bay it Ys save wkea ysa ass it Calumet contains only such ingredients as have been approved officially by tbe U. S. Food Authorities. HIGHEST
ALUM SI Kjt5 6AKWG prfPy
EATON, O., Jan. 31 Advices from Clovd Griswold. received here by bis
grandmother, Mrs. Ada Gilmore. state i ggj that he has arrived from overseas and ! m expected to reach Camp Sherman I rfj
sometime this week. He landed at an ym
IIIIIHWIUII
mm
and while it is not com. it nas ramea Afantjc port last Saturday. He was for the last nineteen days and still no wjf Q a fie(1 llospital company in signs of stopping. France and was wounded by a Hun "Visited the town of St. Nazaire last snH, last Julyi hig injuries confining Sunday. It is a ser.?oast town about hin) jn a hospital a ong tjmo. nt, ,.,.
eighteen miles trom nere. uougni a b,vkp(1 for France last March, at'tfr
! entered h service xt Columbus.
is about 20 years old.
He He
pound of chocolates there for three j pnIif,tinp; in thl preceding June.
irancs. i "We moved out of our tents into j
hnrracks tbis week, so have no idea
hSX.TKI j .; Rnd-Mf Houses to Rent with a IT. S. Aviation corps in F.-ic- ; " land for ome time has received his' Great difficulty Is being experienced honorable discharge and is again tvith , hy real estate men In getting houses ,.. .ouv i fr rent, according to John I'eltz. real
Ills liir. ,, i , . . . , . . I estate man. There, are no houses in j m ..o-iv .h. 'mp wis tnrnln Richmond for rent, and none are be-1 m
Awt (rixjnou i m thrv main rnr hp.rt in I
this nart of France." writes Allen Rich j houses for sale
in a letter-to Ms father. "Some wiieat and hay is raised, but a hog is aj scarce animal. . Horses are not plentifnl Oxen are for hard work and ai
good many of them are raised.
built, he said. There are some
He suggests thai the onlv way out
of this difficulty is to encourage t lie building of houses bo:h for rent and for sale.
I guess it won't be long until I am j Take ActlOfl to StamO
1 1. ...,,1 nl1 IT A 1,1111V I
expected to get a Hun or two, but suppose I am going to miss that opportunity." -
Out Fla at Hagerstown
WHAT FRANCE HAS DONE FOR DEMOCRACY France has poured out blood and treasure to the breaking point to make the world safe for democracy. Amnrica nu-a her an enormous debt of
gratitude for this and also for a per-' feet remedy for stomach, liver and
Intestinal trouble found Dy ner peasants and used with reported marvelous results in this country. . George H. Mayr, for many years a prominent Chicago chemist, imports the ingredients and sells this remedy under the name of Mayr'a Wonderful Remedy. It Is a simple, harmless preparntlnn thnt removes the catarrhal mu
cus from the intestinal tract and allays ,
the innamatlon wmcii causes practi-i rally all stomach, liver and intestinal j ailments. Including appendicitis. One! dose will convince or nidney refunded. ) Clem Thistlethwaito's six drug stoves ; and druggists, everywhere.. .Ad.- ,. i
Poslam Forces Ailing Skin to Improve
To be rid of an unsightly skin trouble assures increased pride, comfort, satisfaction. If your suffering from eczema's distress has been intense, you are entitled to real relief, the relief that.Poslani can bring you quickly. It makes tbe work of healing short and pleasant. A little goes a long way and t'os a great deal, the skin responds so nuickly. Itching Irritation stops. Pimples and rashes go, and, best of all, Poslam will not, can not, harm. , Sold everywhere. For free sample write to Emergency Laboratories, 243 West 47th St., New York City. Poslam Scap is the tonic soap for the skin and will freshen and beautify your complexion. Adv.
Word received by the Palladium from Corporal William R. Cook says he is well, and is now in Pons, France.
Private Horace Neal writes that he is stationed with Co. 15. 1st. Prov. Tr. Reg. 83rd 2dep. div. with the American forces in France. He says: "This camp's roster is composed mostly of hospital evacuatese. army candidates school men, and men who have been billeted at some other place and have not bee to the front." !
Dr. W. C. Roland, member of the State Board of Health, met with the Hagerstown town board of trustees and resident physicians and adopted drastic regulations locking to a speedy stamping out of influenza, according to an Indianapolis dispatch. The Red Cross is assisting in the work. This is the first serious attack of influenza in the town.
Cause of Teeth Stains and Germs the Remedy
A QUICK AND HARMLESS RHEUMATISM REMEDY That Has Driven All Agony from Hundreds of Despairing Sufferers.
It Is not generally known, outside of the dental profession, that on all teeth are thin, transparent films or "plaques." which dentifrices, are incapable of erasing. This accounts, for' the ohstinacv of most teeth-stains, for when (hese. films become discolored from any caus. the most persistent brushlnsr has little If anv effect on them VThis also accounts for millions of teeth grerms. the surfaces underneath the films providing such fruitful breeding places. tn the 'light of these facts, considerable importance must be attached to the discovery by a prominent dentist of a combination of substances which completely and quickly removes these discolored films. The product which he evolved, known as "Once-a-Week Tooth Polish." not only is entirely norvinJurious to the enamel, but is remarkably potent in preserving teeth : and
orventinsr decay;- -It one will procure ,
a package of this from the druggist and i places. . . a I i 1 1 1 n it a fnnlh hruvli rtnm a .
week tlm .disagreeable stains will not return, tartar will not .form, srerms will not attack the enamel. This information will prove- invaluable to every one desirous - of owning really clean, white, beautiful teeh. Parents should see that their children use this product regularly.- AdVfc ; ;
Be fair to yourself, yea sufferer from rheumatism, no matter what
form. Get from your druggist a pack- j sp age of Rheuma, the guaranteed pre-1 scription. Use the entire bottle, and jlH if you don't think it has given you j quick and sure relief, say so. and you : is can have your money back. I jaj Isn't that i fair offer? Can you see i 14
any deceit about it? What chance do
you take? Absolutely none.
Then get a bottle of Rheuma today. It's a reputable physician's prescrip-, tion, altogether different from" remedies usually prescribed, free from narcotics, and perfectly harmless.
' Rheuma acts on the kidneys and ' m helps to force the ttric acid from theiHf
swollen joints ; and i other lodging
It pleases you in a day; , jt , la
I manes you nopnui uu m v ;
week, it nas reieasea irom uonuage gg rheumatic sufferers who thought noth-; &
ine would give relief. It should do as gs
much for you it seldom fails. Yourj
druggist will supply you and guarantee money back if not satisfactory. Adv.
A hig molasses jug "blew up" in Boston the other day and killed a score or more of people, and in addition caused much damage to property. The cause of the explosion was, in all likelihood, fermentation. Many people do not know that the so-called New Orleans molasses is highly susceptible to fermentation, and that if it is not looked after properly an explosion is not to be surprised at. This great batch of molasses, some two million gallons, was evidently not cared for properly. It was just placed in the vast container and allowed to take care of itself. Fermentation set in gradually, and eventually the big blow-off came. It sort of reminds one of some business-undertakings which are given a good start by their promoters and then left to take care of themselves. A fermentation will start in a business way unless it is offset by judicious advertising, and unless this advertising is .looked after and continued carefully there will eventually result a big "blowing up," after which there will be little left of the business. Classified ads in The Palladium day after day will prevent fermentation and stagnation in your business enterprise. Don't accept our word for it. Try it and
see.
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