Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 44, Number 112, 21 March 1919 — Page 5
PAGE FIVE
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM FRIDAY, MARCH 21, 1919.
HOUSEHOLD HINTS By Mrs. Morton
RECIPES FOR A DAY. ..Cheese Scuffle Two tablespoons butter substitute. One tablespoon flour. One cup milk. One cup (quarter pound) grated cheese. Three eggs. , One-half teaspoon salt. One-eighth teaspoon paprika. Dash white pepper. Put the butter into saucepan over fire; when melted add flour; mix until smooth; then add the cold milk; stir until smooth; boil three minutes. Remove from the fire; add the grated cheese and Btir until melted. Separate the eggs; beat the yolks until well mixed; add to the cooked mixture; beat the whites until dry and fold in lightly. Brush earthenware dish with a little butter; pour In mixture; put in moderate oven and bake twentyfive to thirty minutes. Serve at once. Baked Potatoes Select smooth, medium sized potatoes. Wash, using a small vegetable brush, and place in a dripping pan. It is much easier to turn them by giving the pan a quick shake than it is to place them on the grate and have to reach in and possibly receive a burn. Bake In a hot oven forty-five minutes or until soft; remove from the oven and serve at once. If they must stand, the skin should be broken to let out the steam, otherwise the potatoes will become soggy.
HEART AND BEAUTY PROBLEMS
By Mrs. Elizabeth Thompson
Dear Mrs. Thompson: I hate my work. It is very hard and I feel as though I shall never be able to continue doing it. Get another job, you will advise. But it is the same with them all. After about six months I must drag myself to work . That sounds as if I were lazy, doesn't it? But I don't think I am. It is not the thought of -work I hate, but the monotony of it after awhile. I like writing stories and drawing pictures. Also I love 'to see new places not cities, people or such things, but even if I walk out in the hills I feel like a different person. I ouce lived where there were mountains and plains and sunshine. That was when I was a child. The memory of it haunts me and I always have a strange longing to go there once again. I never can sit and think or close my eyes but what strange adventures and happenings that I never have read or heard pass constantly through my mind. My one desire seems to be to record them in story form. I do not care the least for boys and so I am not a silly romantic girl picturing live stories for myself. My mother is dead and so I cannot go to her for advice. I am past twenty. Am I shiftless and lazy do you think? If the "ihould be such a thing as the hap. nlngs of my imagination merging into a story, how could I get it published? I haven't the slightest idea about it. I have always had a strange desire to see the beautiful land of Japan to live among the simple people and know and love them for what they really are. This is another strange feeling I cannot explain. What do you think of it? ONE IN NEED OF A FRIEND. You lack ambition or the ability to apply yourself. If you continue to drift as you are doing now, you will
A Woman's Business By Zoe Beckley
From the day Janet and Nicoll, walking uptown together from the office, had seen Walter Stedman and Lucy go into Lucy's studio, a feeling of dread settled over Janet. Up to that time no thought of Walt's disloyalty had entered her mind. On the contrary, Janet blamed herself for the whole situation. If she had not been so keen on her own advancement in the business world she might" have learned to help Walt in hlr. writing work. At least she might have made and kept a cheerier, sweeter home atmosphere such as it had been when they were first married and Janet's business cares were lighter. But Lucy, artist and bohemian, had offered her help, and it had proven Just the sort of help and collaboration Walt most needed. Janet could not, under the circumstances, find fault. Roy Nicoll's interpretation, however was quite different. It was clear to Janet that Nicoll took the usual view the view of the person who judges people en masse and says, with a shrug: "Oh, it's human nature. What can you expect when a man's robbed ' sf his wife's society and is constantly Lhrown with another woman? One who cares for him at that!" It was not her husband's possible "unfaithfulness" that tormented Janet. The coarser forms of love were not a part of Janet's speculation Besides, Walt had convinced her long ago that lie felt no attraction for Lucy save that of intellect. But their intellectual affinity was. the very thing she now began to fear and dread. What if, as Roy Nicoll adroitly contrived to hint, Walt no longer set value upon what scant companionship
WHERE CAN I FIND RELIEF FROM ITCHING. TERRIFYING ECZEMA?
This Question Is Ever on the Lfps of the Afflicted. Eczema, Tetter, Erysipelas, and other terrifying conditions of the skin, are deep-seated blood diseases, and applications of salves, lotions and washes can only afford temporary relief, without reaching the real seat of the trouble. But Just because local treatment has done you no good, there is no reason to despair. You simply have not sought the proper treatment, that is within your reach. You have the experience of others who have suffered as you have to guide you to a prompt riddance of blood and skin diseases. No matter how terrifying the irritation, no matter how unbearable the itching and
l
DESSERTS. FOR SICKROOM. Fruit With White of Egg One cooked prune, mashed through strainer, sweetened to taste, then added to one egg, white which has been beaten until dry, put into moderate oven and baked until set (about twelve to fif teen minutes); when cold dust with cinnamon and serve Peach- One tablespoon of peach jam rubbed through strainer is used the same way. Plum, pear or berry Jam Is used the same way. The yolk of egg can be used for the broth same as a whole egg. Baked Potato Garnished With Correctly Cooked Bacon Remove the potato on to small hot dish, season nicely with salt and pepper, shape like an omelet and put two or three bacon curls on top( with top springs of parsley between the bacon. Cover and serve at once. With either of these recipes serve either a email dish of spinach or cauliflower. Pudding If one is making any pudding, such as rice, tapioca, farina, bread, cracker, cottage, queen of all puddings, etc., for them family, fill a custard cup full when the pudding is partially done, then finish baking in cup. It is more attractive. Decorate with a small piece of fruit cut in dainty shape. .' never succeed in any way. As a writer you would have to be very well read. Instead of sitting "idly with your thonghts running'riot study and read. Besides this, put in writing the wonderful thoughts you think you have. Your first stories will not be good. Only practice and great study will enable you to write a Btory which the magazines would consider accepting. To get a story accepted It is necessary to pick out a magazine which prints stories of the nature of yours. Send it to the publisher of the magazine enclosing sufficient stamps to have it returned in case it is not wanted. Do not become discouraged at one attempt. If one publisher does not like it, try another, and keep trying until you are convinced that no one wants it. You hate your work because you do not do it with the right spirit. There is romance in ' everything. If you apply yourself and use your imagination to increase your speed and efficiency you will take an inter est in it and the time will pass quickly. Be thankful that you have something hard to do, because it is only hard tasks "which bring worth while results. Japan is not impossible if you really want to go there. A few years hard work and careful saving would put you in position to take the .trip. See if you can get work in an advertising office. I think you would like it there. Of course the work would be difficult. Dear Mrs. Thompson: I have been going to one church, but there is another church that I like very much. I like the pastor of the last church the better. Which would you advise me to join? SEVENTEEN. Join the church you prefer. The fact that you go to church is more important than the church you go to. Janet could give? What if Walt was tired of her? Weary of her commercial ideals? Out of sympathy with her ambition to make a great popular magazine of "Woman"? Perhaps all he wanted was his bohemia, his artist and writer friends, his congenfal souls, whe toiling for "pure ideals" themBaby Coming To Your Home? Thf Wonderful Event That Will Brlnj Much Gladness. Are ron looting forward, dear prospective mother, to ths wonderful. glorious timo viben yon shall hold In yonr arm the lima mite, which Is of your flesh and blood, with reclines cf misgiving? , Npw Is the time ta get la condition to meet the crisis, and three generations of women have found in the time-honored, preparation. Mother's Friend, a grateful, penetrating remedy to prepare their systems to withstand the shock. The action of this famous remedy Is to relievo tension on drawn nerres, cords, tendons and ligaments, to relieve strain and discomforts, sucb as nausea, nervousness, bearing-down and stretching pains. By regular use during the period the muscles expand easily when baby Is bom: pain and danger at the crista Is naturally less end the hours are fewer. Do not neglect the use cf Mother's Friend. It Is for external application only, is absolutely safu end wonderfully effective. Write the Bradfteld Regulator Company, Dept. N. Lamar Building. Atlanta, Georgia, for their Motherhood Book, and obtain a bottle cf Mother's Friend from the drug .tore. It Is just as standard as anythln? :. can tUnk cf. burning of the skin, S. S. S. will promptly reach the seat of the trouble and forever rout from the blood every trace of the disease, just as it has for others who have suffered as you have. This grand blood remedy has been used for more than fifty years, and you have only to give it a fair trial to be restored to perfect health. Our chief medical adviser is an authority on blood and skin disorders, and he will take pleasure in giving you such advice as your individual
case may need, absolutely without cost. Write today, describing your case to Medical Department, Swift Specific Co., 252 Swift Laboratory. Atlanta, Ga. Adv, . ... -
selves, understood him and his aims as his wife, so prosperous in a business sense, could never do? One, moment Janet would grow cold at the very possibility of losing her husband's love. The next, in her reaction from dread, a wave of defiance would engulf her. She felt a wild hatred of bohemia and all it meant. She longed to fly from the world of intellect, ideals and art Into some easy realm where she could drug herself with prosperity and never have to think! i Her work suffered. There were days
when for hours together Janet could think of nothing but her own perplexities. Often, now, she had to consult Nlcoll on matters of management and policy which she formerly had attended to on her own responsibility. And when she went home, tired and longing for Walt's tenderness and sympathy, she found him busy or abstracted evidently not needing her or realizing in the least her need of him. Roy noted with satisfaction Janet's growing dependence on him. It was Into this condition of affairs that he hurled his bomb of discovery. Dorothea Crafton, it seemed, was eager to meet Janet again. She demanded that Roy give them "a party." Would Janet come, and save him, Roy, from being bored to extinction? Janet, glad of the diversion, would, and did. The party was to consist of a dinner, a box at the best show in town and supper afterward at a gay and popular cabaret. Dot Crafton, whose spirits rose steadily as the excellent meal progressed, decided she wanted to meet Janet's husband. "Is he at home, poor dear? Let's 'phone him to join us at the theatre!" she proposed gaily. "He's hard at work on the best chapters of his book," said Janet. "I don't believe we could drag him away from his typewriter with a derrick." "Oh, now " challenged Dorothea archly, shaking a playful finger at the younger woman, "you mustn't be too sure he's at home, even if you did leave him there. Husbands have a way of straying don't they, Mr. Nicoll?" "I I've heard so," answered Roy, with his eyes on his demitasse. "Let's prove it!" cried Dorothea, "I will wager, just for sport, that he won't be home. Let me call him what's the number, Janet?" And she bustled off to the telephone booth. Janet looked at Roy with annoyance in her expression. -Roy returned her glance steadily. "He won't be at home," he said quietly. "My secretary phoned me an hour ago. Walt is at Mrs Benton's studio." (To be continued.) Philomath, Ind. Mr. and Mrs. Ora Hendrix, accompanied by Mrs. Harry Weber, were Richmond shoppers Wednesday . Mr. and Mrs. Earl W. Lee and daughter Naomi, accompanied by Mrs. Earl Doddridge, were Connersville shoppers Wednesday Willard Rodenburg and Jacob Shank were Brownsville visitors Thursday M. B. McCashland visited with his daughter, Mrs. John Clevenger on Thursday afternon Mrs. Jacob Shank called on Mrs. M. B. McCashland Thursday afternoon. .. .County Agent M. A. Nye visited this place and vicinity Thursday, making tests of three specimens of soil for E. W. Doddridge for acidity. He also called on the Brownsville school E. W. Doddridge made a business trip to G. A. R. Dickson's home Friday. .. .Lambert Funk visited i with John Retherford Sunday Dr. I and Mrs. J. F. Bradlev visited with i her brother. Walter McCashland and family of Pea Ridge Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Clevenger spent Monday with his parents Mr. and Mrs. David Clevenger Mr. and Mrs. M. B. McCashland were Brownsville visitors Friday The Division of the army in France containing the company of Elmer Rodenburg is reported to have sailed for the United States.. ..Earl W. Lee and family attended the Hendershott entertainment Tuesday evening Irvin Doddridge is hauling corn from a car at Brownsville. Masonic Calendar Friday, March 21 King Solomon's Chapter, No. 4, R. A. M. Called convocation. Work in the Mark Master degree. DMMI EOT WATJEE W HJ DESKS A EOST 0M3PLmM Says we can't help but lock better and feel better after an Inside bath. To look one's best and feel one's best is to enjoy an inside bath each morning to flush from the system the previous day's waste, sour fermentations and poisonous toxins before it is absorbed into the blood. Just as coal, when it burns, leaves behind a certain amount of incombustible material in the form of ashes, so the food and drink taken each day leave in the alimentary organs a certain amount of indigestible material, which if not eliminated, form toxins and posins which are then sucked into the blood through the very ducts which are intended to suck in only nourishment to sustain the body. If you want to see the glow of healthy bloom in your cheeks, to see your skin get clearer and clearer, you are told to drink every morning upon arising, a glass of hot water with a it,, which is a harmless means of washing the waste material and toxins from i the stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels before putting more food into th stomach. Men and women with sallow skins, liver spots, pimples or pallid complexion, are those who wake up with a coated tongue, bad taste, nasty breath, others who are bothered with headaches, bilious spells, acid stomach or constipation should begin this phosphated hot water drinking. A quarter pound of limestone phosphate costs very little at the drug store but is sufficient to demonstrate that Just as soap and hot water cleanses, purifies and freshens the skin on the ' outside, so hot water and limestone phosphate act on the inside organs. Adv
DOUGLAS FAIRBANKS NOW BRIDE
iiMi m r f iM -
'3? id - B
Mr. and Mrs. James Evans, Jr., just after tl;e ceremony; Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., in the background. Mrs. Douglas Fairbanks, former wife of the moving picture star, recently became the bride of James Evans, Jr., a Pittsburg broker. Mrs. Fairbanks obtained her final decree of divorce on March 3.
Eldorado, 0. Perry Eby and family, near Yankeetown spent Sunday with Davd Wolford and family of west of town Mrs. George Beard is visiting with tier sister Mrs. Mary Nearon of Hamilton, O S. A. Minnich of Dayton spent Sunday with Mr. andMrs. Jerry Minnich. Clarence Minnich and family were afternoon caller Ed Bunger and Tobe Beard called on George Beard Sunday afternoon Among those from a distance who attended the funeral of Mrs. ' John Mackey, were: Mrs. and Mrs. A. J. Armstrong of Marion, Ind., Mrs. D. C. W. Mackey of Portland, Ind., Omer Mackey of New Madison, Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Horn of Bethel, Ind., Wm. E. Null and family, Harry Bragg and family and Ed Bragg and famly of near New Paris, and Odes Gangwer and family Vai
Ks - II 1 II
I IV fTfl SJ .111 I I z
k
"UBK "'STlDtlV.S.
,R&5Dire
mine .77 WB "zSt. WHS.
.
FORMER WIFE OF PITTSBURG BROKER
of near Ithaca, and L. D. Bragg and wife of New Paris.... Mr. and Mras. Harley Coovert were entertained at the home of Mr. and Mrs. H. R McPherson Sunday. .. .Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Ullom, Mrs. Gertrude Moore and Miss Edith Minnich spent Sun day evenng with Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Mastin. .. .Mr. and Mrs. Charley Jordan were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Emrick, Sunday. Ed Trick and family were afternoon callers Mrs. O. L. Daily who has been quite ill with influenza at her home near West Manchester, was removed to the home of her nephew Alonzo Daily of south of town, last Thursday. Mrs. Daily is slowly improving Mr. and Mrs. Enil Roberts of near Yankeetown spent Sunday with the latter's mother, Sirs. Jennie Miller Ralph Truitt and family spent Friday evening with Merkle Miller and family. . . . Mr. and Mrs. A. V. McClure and Mr. niLLlKG 9 MOiST. Jm "
c!,factur,:d kj best A 1
and Mrs. H. A. Peele and son Richard spent Saturday evening in Richmond. Mrs. Mattie Spitler and Mary McFaddin of Castine and Bert Geeting and family spent Wednesday evenng with Clarence Spitler and wife.....V. B. Harter of New Madisqn spent Friday with his daughter, Mrs. O. II. Mastin and husband. Fred Ever and family spent Sunday with Mr.' Eyer's brother, Frank
jt?r auu lawny . . XV. t. ..iiiii nuuy lamny spent ssunaay ariernoon near New Madison as the guests of their daughter, Mrs. D. E. Hollinger and family. .. .Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Stump and son Rufus of Palestine spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. G. C. Stump.. ..Miss Thelma Barnhart entertained Miss Ruth Henderson Sunday. .. .Mr. and Mrs. William Oswalt and Mrs. Bert Eddins were Richmond shoppers last Thursaay. . . . A. F. White accompanied a shipment of hogs to Cincinnati last Thursday. .. .Mrs. E. C. White and son Earl of Centerville. Ind., spent Saturday night and Sunday with the former's sister, Mrs. John Deem and family. ... Mrs. Jane Swartzel and Mrs. Jerry Minnich called on Mrs. Samuel Ullom Thursday afternoon. . . W. B. Harter of New Madison and Mrs. O. H. Mastin called on Mrs. Samuel Ullom Friday afternoon.... Mr. and Mrs. John Guenther and son Edgar and Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Stump and family spent Tuesday with Mr, and Mrs. G. C. Stump. Pineapple Desserts 2c The bottle fa each package of Pineapple Jiffy-Jell contains all the rich essence 2 pineapple. The dessert has a wealth of this exquisite flavor, and a package serves six people for 12 cents. You owe to yourself a trial of this new-type gelatine dainty. 10 Flavor, at Your Grocer 2 Package for 25 Cent 4
4
Welcome him with home baking.
Home" to our
mother and the folks first and home-eating next. Army rations are nourishing, but nothing can compare with the home-made bread, pies and cakes that mother gives him. Treat him, and the wnole family, with the kind of baking that Valier's Enter
prise Flour makes the ightest that ever came
He'll say, "Mother, you're some cook!
Valier's Enterprise Flour is the highest quality baking
it does.. It's an ideal in flour making alwavs maintained. When it couldn't be
maintained, due to war milling regulations, it wasn't made at all. Phone your grocer for tk sack of Valier's Enterprise floor, today. Community W Valier's highgrade popular-priced flouc It has made hosts of friends.
ASK SENATOR REED TO RESIGN.
JEFFERSON CITY.Mo., March 21. Resolution was passed at conference of Democratic state representatives, calling upon" U. S. Senator Reed to resign his seat The action, is the result of the Senator's speech Tuesday before the legislature. ; " : Thdre's Magic, in Red Cross Ball Blue A hundred years ago, the magic, dazzling whiteness it gives to the coarsest as well as most delicate fabrics would have caused ita user to be hailed as a witch. To-day she is the envy of her neighbors, at much less labor to herself. Makes clothes beautiful. Buy it try it and you'll stick to it. At all good grocer 5 Cents . Almost Freef DR. J. J. GR0SVEN0R Practice Limited to Internal Medicine City Light Building. 32 S. 8th St. BRUSH USERS Be sure that the Fuller Trade Mark is on your Brushes to insure your guarantee. sola by airs. tieo. Cunningham, and Mrs. Walter Murray exclusively. NEW METHOD'S TUFF WORK SHOES 2nd Flocr Colonial Bldg. boys .means finest, whitest, out of an oven. made to give results and mv. mm altNLItC
Isa TSuKlVcS' S
rutvn na
