Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 44, Number 82, 14 February 1919 — Page 5

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM FRIDAY, FEB. 14, 1919.

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hi cirt a wtvd B e xvt y V Jytg-T 1-XiaA-RE.TH THOItPJOr

Dear Mrs. Thompson: I am a girl of eighteen and am engaged to a man ten years my senior. He has gone tjo war and I now have another friend. He seems much dearer to me than tlie first man. They would both make vie a happy home. I really love the second. Would It be all right to give up tfae first although he always treated ine grandly? If bo, how shall I do it? ' A LOVER DELIGHT. It would be all right to break an engagement with a man you do wot kve. Do not, however, become en

gaged to the other man. You are too young to know real love, and should wait a few years until you are rniore sure of youtf tastes. A girl should not marry a man with whom she kn aws she can be happy; she should marry a

man whom she feels she cannot live without. . , -

Dear Mrs. Thompson: 1 am a mar

ried woman with three children. J My

husband is very jealous of me. What can I do to prove that I am true to him. He is jealous of me if I g o to

church or anywhere without him, and he will not go with me. What should I do? Go to church without him or stay at home with him? And what can I do to make him care for me as he once did? WORRIKD. Your husband cares for. you or he would not be jealous. You fea r his opinion too much. . Go to church and do whatever you consider right: for you to do. When he criticises, remain

silent. Words over the matter will do

no good and will not cure him ot his Jealousy. It may be that when he learns you are firm about goin& to church, he will accompany you., , . Dear Mrs. Thompson: It was necessary for me to leave school to .go to work in order to help my parents. How can I improve my education, other than at night school? . If p 'jooks will help, what books wo -" ' recommend? M. D. D. P.ti .vill help you to improve your education to a very great extent. Consult a librarian or-the principal at high schol. They will consider your age, tastes and the amount ' of education you have already had, when they advise you. . , . Dear Mrs. Thompson: I have a friend in the marines who is two years my senior, but most of the fellows I go with are from twenty to twentytwo. I am twenty:four. Do yoti think I am doing wrong in going with fellows who are two or three years younger than I? BRIGHT BLUE EYES. . It is all right to go with men a few years younger than yourself. Be fair to them and do not let them learn to care for you. So often an older girl has power over a boy younger than herself.

BLACK LACE ROBE FOR DINING HOME

life 1

Beautiful, indeed, is this robe designed for wear at the informal dinner at home. Henna colored chiffon forms the underdress while a eoree-

ous black lace coat is the novel f ea-' I

ture of the cowa, - - -

Webster

Jesse Gibson has gone to Michigan

to look for a farm.... Mrs. Yunt of

Greensfork inspected the farm which

she recently purchased in this vicini

ty.... Those attending the funeral of

Mrs. John Townsend of Fountain City

Monday were Mr. and Mrs. Clark Hol-

Hngsworth, Mrs. Lucile Beeson and daughter. .. .The Ladies Aid society met at the home of Mrs. Belle Willis

Wednesday afternoon William Lamb lost a number of sheep a few nights ago when doys got into his

flock. .. .James Brown and son ship

ped a car load or hogs this week...,

Mr. and Mrs. Cleo Culberson, Jesse Gibson and daughter Mildred and John Stotten were in Richmond Wed

nesday. .. .Mrs. Helen Myers, Mr. and Mrs. Marion Myers were Richmond shoppers Wednesday. .. .The Red Cross society will meet at the homo of Mrs. Joe Thompson Thursday after-

noone for sewing. .. .Lincoln's Birth

day was observed at the school Wed

nesday afternoon Mrs. Stella Bond was calling on her aunt. Mrs. Mattle Croks of Olive Hill Monday afternoon.

INSURANCE HE A3 DIES.

NEW YORK. Feb. 14. Joseph Kendall, president of the Missouri State Life Insurance company of St. Louis, formerly of Dallas, Texas, died of bronchial pneumonia at Bellevue hospital here after a four days' illness from influenza. He was 34 years old and leaves besides his mother, a widow and three children.

Dear Mr. Thompson: I have a soldier friend in France. Before he went he wrote to me. He has not written since he landed about three months agq. Do you think he cares for me? ' All the boys think I am good-looking an dthey all seem to like me. - What can I do not to seem conscious of the fact? BRUNETTE. The boy may have a good reason for not writing, or his letters may have miscarried. Do not judge his regard for you until he returns. Remember that beauty is the most empty thing in the world if it is not backed with character and a lovable nature. Very often a woman interests men at first, but she cannot hold their regard. Be thoughtful of others and forget yourself. . j Dear Mrs. Thompson: (1) I am a girl seventeen years, or age. Is it proper for a girl to shake hands when saying good-night to a young man? (2) What should a girl say when a young man asks her to have ice cream with him? If she does? If she does not? BLACK-EYED SUSAN. (1) It Is correct to shake hands or not' to. It is more, cordial to do so, however. (2) "Thank you, I would like ice cream." Or, "Thank you, but if you don't mind, I would rather not this time."

Women's Defense Section Plans to Continue Work

i j 'By Associated Press) WASHINGTON, Feb. 14. Appoint

ment of a committee to formulate plans for continuing the activities of the state divisions of the women's section of the Council of National Defense was announced today. The committee will consist of Mrs. E. C. Thompson, of Wisconsin, Mrs. Samuel Inman, of Georgia, Miss Alice Hunt, of Rhode Island, and Mrs. Stanley McCormick and Miss Hannah J. Patterson, present members of the women's division. The section announced that at a meeting here of women members of council from Mississippi, Georgia, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Vermont, New Jersey, Tennessee, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin and Virginia, resolutions were passed indorsing the fright of women in industry to hold positions for which they are competent.

Masonic Calendar

HOUSEHOLD HINTS By Mrs. Morton

Friday, Feb. 14 King Solomon's Chapter No. 4, R. A. M. stated convocation. Saturday, Feb. 15 Loyal Chapter. No. 4, O. E. S. Stated meeting, initiation of candidates. '

In a charter recently granted to a grocery company at Charleston, W. Va., authority is given to "deliver groceries and food products by aerial navigation."

USE DRIED FRUITS Apricot Tapioca Cook one half cup granulated tapioca in four cups boiling liquid (fruit juice and water) until clear. Add one cup fruit, half cup sugar, a speck of salt and a speck of cinnamon. Turn into a glass and serve with top milk or cream. ' ' Apricot and Rice Pudding, Cook one cup rice in one quart boiling, salted water for fifteen or twenty minutes, drain, reserving the water in which the rice was cooked (it will make excellent starch for delicate waists or dresses). To the drained rice add two cups of the fruit which has been cooked and sweetened. Serve with a sauce made of apricot juice, i Apricot Sauce One cup apricot juice, one cup water.speck salt, onequarter cup sugar; boil all together and add two tablespoons of cornstarch mixed with a little cold water. Cook to remove the raw taste of the starch. Apricot Bread Pudding Two cups dried bread crumbs, one-quarter teaspoon salt, one egg, one tablespoon melted shortening, one and onehalf cups fruit, cooked and sweetened but with the juice drained off, two cups milk. Scald the milk and add the bread crumbs. Let stand until the crumbs are soft; beat the egg, add to the milk and crumbs, then the salt and fruit; pour into an oiled baking dish; set the dish in a pan of water

and cook In a moderate oven until firm. ' . ; 1 : : Apricot Roll Two cups of flour, two tablespoons sugar, four teaspoons baking powder, half teaspoon salt, two tablespoons solid vegetable fat, about two-thirds cup ;: milk or water; mix and sift the dry ingredients, cut in the shortening, add the liquid gradually, using a knife to mix; roll out on a floured board until one-fourth inch thick; spread with the fruit which has been cooked and sweetened but the juice drained off; sprinkle a few nuts over the top of the fruit, then roll the dough into a long, roll as for cinnamon rolls. Cut into one and one-half inch slices and place, cut side down, in oiled muffin pans. Bake in a hot oven for twenty minutes. Serve hot with the above fruit sauce. GOOD, THINGS, Apple Pudding Sweeten and stew quartered apples; put in buttered baking dish one tablespoon nut margarine one-half cup sugar, one egg, one-half cup sweet milk, one cup flour, one and onehalf teaspoons baking powder. Put in moderate oven and bake twenty or thirty minutes. Serve with cream and sugar or a lemon sauce. Apricot Breakfast Cake Divide the above baking powder mixture into two parts, roll out to fit a cake pan

and place on the bottom of the pan, allowing the dough, to extend up on the sides of the an. Spread each with the fruit mix ture and bake fifteen minutes in ix hot oven. This will make two caJ;es. - -

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