Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 44, Number 106, 14 March 1919 — Page 5
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM
FRIDAY, MARCH 14, 1919. PAGE FIVE
HEART AND BEAUTY PROBLEMS
By Mr. Elizabeth Thompson'
Dear Mrs. Thompson: I have a very dear friend whom I have been running with, and I really don't want any trouble with her. Lately she has been going with a young gentleman and wo cannot agree at all. She always includes me in her good times and I have many reasons in believing that she does not care to lose my friendship. One Sunday evening we were out together and sometime during the evening I offended him in some way or other and I haven't the least idea how It was. The only thing that I can remember saying to him is "Nice old bear." I have tried to make up with him since, but he would not. I am afraid my friend will be angry at me. What would you advise me to do? TIMID BLUE EYES. Your friend should not include you in her evenings wth tho young man. He aEks to see her and not you. I do not believe you said any particular thing to offend him he simply got tired of having someone else around when he called on the girl. Tell your friend that you appreciate her past kindness and that you want to be as close a friend as ever, but in the future you will not be with her when the young man calls. I think you will find matters straightened out when you say this to her. Dear Mrs. Thompson: Please tell me of some exercise which will develop my lower limbs. They are small and not in proportion with the rest of my body. Will walking help them? BETSY R. Exercise helps to make the shape of , the body , normal. Walking will help some, but it will be better to take gymnasium work. Besides this, bowling, swimming and tennis would be good. Dear Mrs. Thompson: I have been
going with a fellow who has Just returned from camp. He acts as if he thinks a lot of me, and I don't care much for him. Please tell me what I can do to learn to like him. Or should I stop going with him when he nsks me? PINKIE. Since you do not like the boy, stop going with him. There is little chance that you could force yourself to enjoy him. He might just as well learn the truth now as later. Dear Mrs. Thompson: I am a young lady twenty years old. I went with a fellow about two years before he entered the service. He is now in France and is expecting to return home soon. He wants me to meet him at his home on his return. Should I meet him or wait for him to come to see me? TINY. Wait until he comes to see you, unless his mother invites you to be present at his home coming. Dear Mrs. Thompson: When I was a young girl I married the man of my heart. We have a daughter who is staying with her father and stepmother and they do not get along well. The father of the child, has asked about me. I was divorced from him and got married and so did he. I know he is not happy and it is the same with me. Do you think he cares for me? He has asked our daughter where I am and what I am doing and how often she heard from me. MRS. R. C. M. Your former husband would naturally be interested to know where you are and about you. The fact that he asked does not indicate that he loves you. You had your chance to keep his love when you were married to him, and failed. Now give up all thought of him. Since you have both marired again you must forget each other entirely.
HOUSEHOLD HINTS By Mrs. Morton
RECIPES FOR A DAY Fish Chowder One pound of steak fish, one quart diced white potatoes, one cup onions chopped, one tablespoon drippings, one cup cracker or dried breadcrumbs, two cups rise stock or milk or half stock and half milk, two tablespoons flour, two teaspoons salt, one-half teaspoon pepper, two tablespoons finely of chopped parsley. Boll and pick the fish into small pieces, add to the potatoes and onions which have been boiled until tender In very little water. Put drippings in pan, add the flour, stir until smooth, then add to the potatoes and fish. Add rice stock and seasoning. Just before serving add crumbs and parsley. This makes a very hearty dish. Filet of Flounder, Sauce Tartare Flounder, one egg, one cup of bread crumbs, one teaspoon salt, one-eighth teaspoon white pepper. Split and remove all bone and skin from flounder; cut in pieces about 2 by 3 inches; wash and dry on piece of cheesecloth, dust wits salt and pepper; dredge with flour; dip in egg which has been beaten with one tablespoon of cold milk, then in bread crumbs; fry in deep, hot fat. Sauce Tartare One cup mayonnaise, one tablespoon finely chopped capers or olives, one tablespoon sour gherkins, one teaspoon onion juice. Be sure the mayonnaise is seasoned highly. Just before serving add the other ingredients; mix and serve in sauce boat. Prune Whip One-half package of lemon Jello, one cup boiling water,
half cup sweetened prune pulp, one egg white. Dissolve jello in boiling water; when it begins to je'ly beat in the prune pulp and stiffly beaten egg white; when firm serve with a boiled custard made from the egg yolk. Hit and Miss Salad One-half cup of canned peas, one-quarter cup peanuts, one and one-half tablespoons chopped sweet pickles, one teaspoon minced onion. Mix thoroughly, heap on plate covered with crisp lettuce. Cover with any preferred dressing and place strips of pimentos on top of dressing.
FOR ONE-DISH MEAL Surprise Meal One-half pound of chopped raw beef, quart of potatoes, one cup carrots, one can peas, one tablespoon parsley, one tablespoon of scraped onion, one and one-half teaspoon salt, pepper, one tablespoon of butter substitute. Wash, pare and cut potatoes and carrots; put both on together and boil until tender. Mash; add onion, salt, pepper and butter substitute. Beat until light. Brush bake dish with the butter substitute, put in the potato and carrots, making it rather high in center. Make six holes with back of tablespoon on top; season and flavor the chopped raw beef to taste and put a tablespoon of beef in each hole; put id hot oven and bake until meat is done to one's liking. Drain and season peas and put around edge of dish. Return to oven until peas are hot. Sprinkle with parsley and paprika. This is a very attractive and tasty dish. Celery or homemade relish is served with this meal.
A Woman's Business
By Zoe Beckley
THE SPUR OF PROSPERITY It disturbed Walter to find that his wife had not yet got home. For all his bohemianism, all his love of liberty and respect for it in the doings of others, it troubled him not to know where Janet was every moment of the time. Late hours and miscellaneous runnings about did not suit Janet, Walt told himself. Whereupon his own evening spent at the Lafayette Cafe and his talk with Lucy Benton reproached him for a dog-in-the-manger. If be followed his own path, he must let Janet follow hers and trust her to choose a safe one. That was Just it a safe one. A9 Walt lay sleepless in his bed, he knew what was troubling him. It was the ever-present thought that along Janet's path also walked Roy Nicoll, relentlessly plying his veiled temptations. The worst of it was that Nicoll's efforts to win Janet were all legitimate all constructive. Nicoll offered her nothing that would have temped the ordinary woman. He offered her a world to conquer, and 6he was conquering It. Walt was left to conquer his own world unassisted. Wrell he clenched his hands and grimly
compressed his lips in the darkness he would conquer it, or die. Repeating this over and rver again, Walt fell asleep, to dream a Jumble of wild victories over skeptical editors and play producers, with Janet, her love for him renewed a thousandfold, watching him in the audience as he shouted an "author's speech" from a gigantic stage. Meanwhile Janet, speeding homeward in NIcoH'b car from a gathering of his wealthy friends at a fashionable residence uptown, was listening to words from Nicoll which were almost an echo of Lucy's to Walter at the Lafayette: "Don't you see, Janet, that all you need is the proper environment?" Roy was urging "How you shone tonight among those people! I was so proud of you, and of myself for putting you in your rightful place." "Oh, yes, it was wonderful, Roy!" murmured Janet in an awed tone. "I felt I must be dreaming ME up there at Miss Lorgan's house actually telling those millionaires how to spen their money! But, Roy don't yi honestly think they listened to me I
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cause of you and your wealth and your position as owner of our magazine?" "Certainly not, child!" said-Nicoll, emphatically. "They are a canny set, those wealthy men and women. They know what they're about. -Miss Lorgan never goes into financial schemes without getting due return. She has watched our magazine, 'Woman, grow from a 40,000 circulation paper to one of the leaders of feminist thought, with big pulling power. And she knows you are a real manager not a figurehead. She knows it's your ideas that have made us what we are in the periodical world. "In their way," he went on, "the rich folks in Miss Lorgan's train are highbrows. They are - thoroughly abreast of the times and really want to do good in the world. They are the sort of people for you to know. They can help you. You'd never get anywhere if you stuck around with the set your husband runs with. I am not knocking them, understand. They've got brains genius even, some ot them. But they're too independent. They aren't willing to get in line with what the public wants. They're fanatics. And and they haven't any money! You can't get anywhere nowadays without money." This was always the climax of all Nicoll's arguments. Keep in with the moneyed ones, and conform, conform, conform! Give the public what it wants in the way of magazines. Do not be too radical. If your ideas are ahead of popular thought, tone them down. Don't be in too much of a hurry to tone up popular thought. To make haste slowly but surely is the best way. His arguments contained much of truth, and he knew how to present them forcibly to Janet. She was almost dizzy, at times, with her own success and prosperity, and it was not difficult to find wisdom in all Roy Nicoll set forth. Nicoll had made it all possible. Nicoll was a hugely successful man. And a very attractive one. . Since Janet had worked for him and with him, he had never once overstepped the boundaries of proper conduct toward her. It seemed to Janet he was too punctilious. She would have been angry at any liberties. Yet she felt a vague resentment, that he seemed no longer interested in her self; only in her work. Nicoll knew just when to revive the personal touch, however, and when he said good-night at the door of her house, he took both her hands In a thrilling grip. "Good-night, little girl," he said, "little queen, rather, whose wisdom is deep and whose charm over her willing subjects is deeper still!" (To be continued.)
Chester, Ind. Miss Roxle Shaffer spent Sunday and Sunday night with Ruth Ulmer. . . . .Rev. and Mrs. L. F. Ulmer attended church in Richmond Sunday afternoon .... Miss Laura McDonald spent last week with Wm. Martin and family at their new home near Cambridge City Miss Clara Kendall returned to her school at Spiceland, Ind., Sunday after spending the week-end with her mother and sister here Several friends and relatives received letters from Mahlon Dalzell in France and Harry Brown in Russia last wek. Both said they were well Mr. and Mrs. Caleb Duke visited the latter's mother west of Richmond last week. . ..Nelson Hampton has received his discharge from the navy and has returned home Miss Marjorie Pickett attended a club meeting at the home of Mrs. Camilla Overman in Richmond Tuesday evening. .. .Mrs. Clara Jonathan and children of Chicago have been visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Simms here.
PEACOCK WILL PROBATED.
WINCHESTER, March 14 The will of Elijah Peacock has been probated. He leaves $200 to his daughter Nora Diggs, and $200 to his son, Joseph Peacock, and $100 to each of two grandchildren. The remainder of his estate he wills to his son, C. A. Peacock and wife. C. A. Peacock is nomed as administrator and filed his bond In the sum of $2,000 Tuesday.
GIRLS! HAVE RADIANT HAIR SOFT AND FLUFFY
COOKING FOR THE PEACE MAKERS
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Ohio News in Flashes
HILLSBORO Homer Bryant, colored, was arrested at Springfield, charged with the murder of John Moses, Hillsboro merchant. He is said to have a twenty-five year police record. A reward of $500 had been offered for the murder. TOLEDO The biggest oil refinery In the world will be built here by the Standard Oil company. YOUNGSTOWN Six people were injured and 300 had close calls when a shifting engine sideswiped a Pittsburg and Lake Erie train, knocking the engine and a combined baggage car and smoker into the river. CLEVELAND A youthful holdup man returned two of Lamar Ellis six dollars when Ellis said he was out of carfare and out of work. He was arrested later. TOLEDO A letter saying he was the spirit of God, sent to encourage the League cf Nations, and $1,000 were found on the body of a well-dressed man who shot himself on a Big Four train near Carey.
Lynn, Ind'
CLEVELAND Victor D. Miller, manager of the Clarendon hotel, was awarded $73,000 for the loss of his legs in a railroad accident on the Pennsylvania. It is the biggest verdict ever rendered in a personal injury suit in Ohio.
The photo shows a group of French cooks at the Hotel Majestic, where the staffs of allied peace envoys of the various countries are fed during the sessions of the peace conference in Paris.
Webster, Ind.
.Mr. and Mrs. Cleo Culberson were among the Richmond visitors 'Wednesday, also Isaac Steddom, Leo Burnett, Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Plaakenhorn, Mr. Jack Stotten, Mr. and Mrs. Jess Gibson, F. D. Jay, and Clarence Palmer. ....Mrs. W. J. Turman and Mrs. Oscar Lovin of Richmond visited Mrs. "Bud" Demree Wednesday Mrs. Oscar Plankenhorn and Mrs. Clark Hollingsworth visited Mrs. Naomi Plankenhorn Tuesday afternoon.... Mrs. Jennie Borton visited her son Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Borton of Richmond Tuesday afternoon .'Mrs. Demree called on Mrs. Delphia Hollingsworth Thursday Mrs. Mattie Richie of Cincinnati is visiting relatives in and near Webster this week.
Latin-American Bill Against Germans is Billion Dollars
(By Associated Press) PARIS, March 14. Espionage so far received .from Latin-American government of damages incurred In the war indicate that the bill for reparation from those countries will be ap
proximately one billion dollars. The claims are confined largely to ships sunk by the enemy but some cf the Latin-American countries are seeking the repayment of money deposited in Berlin and Hamburg banks and confiscated by Germany especially Brazil whose citizens habitually maintained large accounts In Germany because of the coffee trade.
IT GOES AND GROWS What is true of a snowball is true of a garden. Start one and write to the National War Garden Commission, at Washington, for a garden book, enclosing two-cent stamp for postage.
Mrs. John Martin and Mrs. C. T. Hoover attended a Sunday School convention at Centerville Thursday.... Mrs. Newton Reed accompanied her sister, Mrs. F. Martin to her home In Greenville, O., for a few days visit.. . ..Mrs. Paul Gray of Winchester spent Thursday with Mr. and Mrs. Frank Daly. . . .Mrs. Dale liutchings and daughter of Washington, D. C. are visiting her parents Mr. and Mrs. I. G. Johnson. . ..Norman Anderson left Wednesday morning for Sikestown, Mo., to spend a few days with his daughter, Mrs. Harry Johnson and family.... Mrs. Ed Hamilton of Winchester Is visiting her mother Mrs. Margaret; Hill for. a few days.... Mr. and Mrs. Henry Tbeising have returned home after several months' stay at Memphis, Tenn.
HOME FROM OVERSEAS.
WINCHESTER, March 14. Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Clevenger have received word announcing the safe arrival of their son, T. ileed Clevenger, from
overseas. Lieutenant Clevenger re
turned on the Mongolia. After going
to France, Lieutenant Clevenger took
special training in the ; technical branch of civil ensineerine. sound
and flash ranging and completed the
course on November 9, two days be
fore the signing of the armistice. -
The Jay of Mctheitad Tc!d
Women TeQ How They Mad Erect On of Great Happiness.
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"Baking" to be proud of. When .you can set before the folks or your friends a cake or a pie, or a loaf of bread that youre proud of that you know looks good and tastes good that's something worth while. Valier's Enterprise Flour is now back. This famous product is ready to be your first aid in baking to give you far finer baking results than you can possibly get with ordinary flour. Ana it is economical because it makes so much more baking per sack.
Valier's Enterprise Flour is made to give the
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