Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 44, Number 175, 6 May 1919 — Page 5

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM TUESDAY, MAY 6, 1919.

PAGE FIVE

1

HOUSEHOLD HINTS

By Mrs. Morton

J

RECIPES FOR A DAY. , Stewed Shank of Beef Four pounds of beef shank, one medium sized onion, one clove, one small bay leaf, one small carrot, one-half tablespoon salt, one-half teaspoon pepper, two quarts boiling water. Have the butcher cut the bone In several pieces, or have him remove the bone entirely. In the latter case, the meat may be tied Into a clean piece of cheesecloth to help it retain ita shape. Put the meat and seasoning In the kettle and add the boiling water. Place the kettle where the water will just simmer for six hours, or after boiling a few minutes put it in the flreless cooker to finish the process. Thicken a portion of the Juice and serve with the boiled beef, reserving the rest to use at another time as soup. ..Horseradish Sauce Add grated horseradish and a little vinegar to

whipped cream. Chill sauce, catsup, kitchen bouquet, spy sauce and others may be used in the gravy to vary the

navor.

Ringlet Salad One cup cabbage, chopped fine; one-half cud walnut

meat, a little green pepper, a little pl-

her mind on her spelling book lesson ' for next day. She was tired there had been so much to do lately &fterc school. . Her eyes roved -over the

grass beds and beyond the trees to

the rows of dignified old houses that flanked the square. Sometimes carriages passed, or stopped before the

WITH THE WOMEN OF TODAY

mento, one cup ringlets (boiled for f-! handsome doorways, and' beautifully teen minutes in salt water). Put these i dressed ladles and children would get all in one package lemon gelatine ia or out. This was one of the spots which has cooled. Let set Then , jn the great city where the poor from serve with mayonnaise salad dressing. 0ver east" merged a little with the Peach Shortcake Yolk of one egg. rich. It was one of Annie Hargan's

one-nan cup sugar, cream weu ana i favorite "dreaming places.

then add three tablespoons of shortening, tablespoons of water, one cup

of flour, two teaspoons of baking-powder, one-half teaspoon of vanilla. Beat to thoroughly mix and then bake in well-greased deep layer cake pan in a moderate oven for twenty minutes. Cook and then split and fill with welldrained crushed canned peaches. Place cake together. Now place white of egg and one-half glassful of apple jelly In a bowl; beat with eggbeater until the mixture forms Into a stiff meringue. ' GOOD CAKE RECIPES Three-Minute Cake Two cups flour, one teaspoon baking powder, one-halt teaspoon salt, one egg, milk. Mix all dry ingredients. Drop egg in a cup and finish filling the cup with milk. Add dry ingredients to liquid. Beat thoroughly. Pour Into papered pan. Bake twenty minutes.

'To be continued.)

Economy, Ind.

i : ' ' .

HEART AND BEAUTY PROBLEMS

By Mrs. Elizabeth Thompson

Dear Mrs. Thompson: I am a girl sixteen and chum with a girl sixteen. Lately she goes with other girls and only goes with me when there isn't anyone else. This hurts me terribly, as I think a lot of her more than I do of anyone else besides my father and brother. She has better clotheB than I do and whenever I see any thing she has new it hurts me so I cant help but cry. But I never let her see me cry except the other night. She begged me to tell her what the matter was, but I told her It was nothing. I don't know why Bhe donesn't want to go with me as she used to. She always tells me her troubles. Do you think she likes me or just goes with me to fill in when there are no other girls to go with? DAISY WON'T TELL. A girl of about your age passes through a period of change. She ceases to be a child and begins to enjoy the

pleasures of young womanhood. Per haps you are more of a little girl than your friend and now she takes pleasure in other girls. This must not discourage you, because at the right time you will change too, and when you see things from the same point of view you will be close friends again. Let your love for the girl be too great to permit Jealousy or envy. The fact that she has pretty clothes should make you happy rather than

sad. It is well to remember, too, that although clothes are attractive, every

thing depends upon the charm of the person who wears them. You can be just as well liked even if your clothes are not as pretty as the clothes ol your friend. Do not regard yourself as second choice. Welcome your friend when she wants you and sympathize with her when she tells you her secrets and troubles. Some day she will appreciate your loyalty and will care more for you than the rest. I am sure she loves you now. Dear Mrs. Thompson: Can you tell me something that will make my hair come in thicker? I had a sickness last

winter which made It fall out. Vaseline is one of the best hair growers, and will help you to get rid of dandruff, if you are. troubled with

It. . . It depends upon the dryness of the scalp how often the vaseline should be applied. Once or twice a week, however, should be often enough. Make a part straight from the front to the back of the head and rub the vaseline in thoroughly. Be careful not to let it get on the hair Itself. When you have finished that part ot the scalp, make another part, and continue thus until you have massaged the whole head.

Grant Kennedy and daughter. Miss Josephine, Mr. and Mrs. Bailey of Richmond spent Sunday with Mr. and

Mrs. Wade Kennedy ..... Mr s. Nettle Fletcher and daughter, Miss Hazel, were at Richmond last Friday...,., Charley Ballenger and family of Carlos spent Sunday with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. George Ballenger, . . . . . Byram Fennimore returned home last week from New York and Tennessee.

. . . .Mr. and Mrs. Cranor visited the

former's father, Lewis Cranor, of Dublin Monday afternoon. .. .Mr. and Mrs. LeBter Sherry of Cambridge vis

ited the latter's mother, Mrs. Ella

Lamb, Sunday Miss Alberta Fisch er was the guest of Miss Rena Mann-

Ing Friday and Saturday.... Mr. and

Mrs. U. G. Manning entertained Dr

Light of Richmond, and Rev. J. J. Fischer Thursday evening. .... .Miss Marcella Cain was at Richmond Saturday Lester Williams and family, Oscar Edwards and Mr. and Mrs. J. L.

Peterson were at Hagerstown Friday .Lawrence Pugh and Francis Brooks have a new car. ...Mrs. Elizabeth Bowman returned home after spending the winter with her Bon. Will Bowman, at Des Moines, la.... Misses Ruth Jackson, Mary Byrd, and Hazel Fletcher left Monday morning for Muncie where they will take work at the State Normal. . . .Dr. Loop returned home Saturday evening. . .... Mrs. Lydia Burnett is home again after a visit with her sisters at Modoc and Union City.-. . .Miss Ruth Jackson spent Thursday at Muncie. .. .Mr. Brammer of Crawfordsvllle visited O. Cranor and family Saturday. .. .Whittier Beard made a business trip to Muncie Thursday.'. . .Rev. J. J. Fisch

er returned home Saturday accompan

ied by his wife and child.... Mr. and

Mrs. Arthur Ballenger of Williamsburg, Mr and Mrs. J. M. Manning, Mr. and Mrs. L. D. Procter motored to Muncie Saturday.... O. T. Cranor and Dick Conway were at New Paris Friday. . . .Henry Rose and Walter Thornburg arrived home Saturday... .Miss Catherine PuBey of Greenfield is spending the week-end with Mr. and Mrs. T. J. Mendenhall. . . .Roy Patton of Ohio was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Lon Cain and daughter, Miss Marcella.

- Soon the old and trite argument men give about women never, succeeding because they do not know how to stick together will have to go into the discard like many other old and worn out ideas about, women. At present there are many, movements on foot among women workers to organize in some manner. Miss Gertrude McNally is general organizer for the National Federation of Federal Employes. She recently went to New York to co-operate with the president of the , Federal Em

ployees' union in a membership cam

paign among the women workers In the Brooklyn navy yard. A confer

ence was held recently in Washing

ton between officers of the National

Federation of Federal Employees and the presidents of local unions at the

several points where are located navy yards and arsenals. . The result is the

launching of a special membership

drive which seeks to enlist the thou

sands of women workers In all the United States navy yards and arse

nals.-.:"

Miss McNally is to solve the prob

lem of organizing these women. HOTEL PETROGRAD ENLARGED

A board and room registry has been

established by the American Y. W.

C. A. in Paris, in connection with

Hotel Petrograd, the Y. W. C. A. hostess house, in order to find accommo

dations for the hundreds of American

women war workers thronging into

Paris these days.

A French woman spends her entire time investigating, rooms in private homes, which, if satisfactory, are put on the list at the Petrograd. Rooms are no longer reserved at the hotel,

NEW PLEASURES 1 day her father was taken down ill. Thereafter Annie had a new pleas- Inflammatory rheumatism, they called

Moore's' Hill "college" have been pro- j DREST THEATRE BURNS . . - . . , BREST. May 6. In spite of the efsented to Dearborn county for the es-;fo8 of American firemen the princltablishment of a county commissioned pal theatre here was destroyed by fire , , . , . , . . , . yesterday. The blaze started during a high school and agricultural school. ehcarsJ and peveraI persons were inThe gift is said to be worth nearly jjured in rescuing the performers. $100 000 The property loss is estimated at 2,- ' 1 000,000 francs.

Miss Gertrude McNally

though a list is kept of people who

have telegraphed or written for ac

commodations several weeks previous

to their arrival, and they are given

the best thing available. One large room has been converted into an emergency dormitory, with eleven army cots. These are filled each night with women who come after 8 o'clock seeking rooms.

"ASPIRIN" WAS

TALCUM POWDER

Heavy Sentence Imposed on Manufacturer of Tablets.

Indiana News Brevities

NEWCASTLE A general shuffle In lots is being made on the American Shovel company's addition to Newcastle, following discovery that practically every lot owner was claiming the wrong lot. John Strauss sued two neighbors for trespassing. A surveyor found that they were not guilty and John himself was trespassing on two other lots.

when it collided with another machine after dashing directly for White river. Both of the machines were damaged, but the little girl was not hurt. MICHIGAN CITY Firmer Shearer, of Huntington, who walked out of the front door of the state prison, January 5, is back again. Paul Smith, turnkey, who is said to have helped Shearer to escape, is under arrest.

(ASSOCIATED PRESS DISPATCH) NEW YORK, December 31. Accused of having manufactured and sold to influenza sufferers thousands of boxes of aspirin tablets, principally composed of talcum powder, Joseph M. Turkey, bead of the Verandah Chemical company, of Brooklyn, was found guilty yesterday of violation of the sanitary code and sentenced" to three years la prison with a fine of $600. The sentence was the most severe ever imposed

in tne country lor sftch an -offense,

Hereafter

say, "Give me gerf

uine 'Bayer Tar51ets of Aspirin.'

Insist you want only the Bayer package with the "Bayer Cross" on the package and on the tablets.

Don't buy Aspirin in a pill box! Get Bayer package!

it

Greensfork, Ind.

ure in life. And a new story to tell the girls of the neighborhood about her wonderful Aunt Moggie. Annie had bragged of Aunt Moggie before how rhe wasn't afraid of thunder and lightning storms and had taught Annie not to be! how she didn't mtnd going right Into a dark room and had laughed away Annie's cowardice in ' this respect; how she had told Annie never to be afraid of ghosts and "spirits," that there weren't any, anyhow, and if there were they wouldn't hurt .her; how Aunt Moggie had taken her to the beach and they had gone In bathing and not been scared at the big cold waves and, oh, lots of thinga. Now Aunt Moggie had taught her something else. None of the other girls know how to work a typewriter. Annie's accomplishment was unique. After this Annie begged incessantly to be let "go to Aunt Moggie's." But sometimes, even when Aunt Moggie came for her, Annie had to mind the

baby instead. The weather was getting hot and the baby needed the air at the docks. "I don't see what good it does to have her fooling all the time with that typewriter ott yours," Annie's mother said once. And Aunt Moggie had answered: "It won't do her a bit of harm to learn a little something outside the house and the babies and the cooking." A little before Annie's ninth birth-

it. He had to stop work, and thero

was a dreadful time. For a long while Annie didn't go to Aunt Moggie's, or see the typewriter, or hardly think of it. When she came home from school there were millions of things to do. The baby was getting big now and seemed to need more of everything more food, more dressing and undressing, more watching and taking care of. There were many errands to run and a great deal of work to help her mother with. , Annie was frantic over her father's sickness. He didn't complain. Whenever Annie asked how he felt, he always laughed and said he'd soon be "sitting up and taking -notice." But when he did finally get up he was so thin and gaunt that it terrified Annie Just to look at him. And he went about on crutches, which frightened her still more.

Crutches belonged with hoepitals and

Mr. and Mrs. Benton BurgeSs, formerly Greensfork residents, celebrated their thirtieth wedding anniversary at their country home near Hagerstown. Many gilts were received. The guests included Mr. and Mrs. Benton Burgess, Mr. and Mrs. Davis Hughes,

Mr. and Mrs. Russell Burgess and family, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Personette and family. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Cloud and family, Mr. and Mrs. Chester Moose and family, Mr. and Mrs. William Burgess, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Bartlett and family, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Clark and family, Mr. and Mrs. Milton Metterts, Mr. and Mrs. Florence BiBh, Mr. and Mrs. Guy Swain. Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Morse, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Burgess, Mr. and Mrs. William Clark and family, Mrs. Anna Clark, Misses Lillian Clark, Lucille Swain, Mary Smith, Ruby Burgess, Clarisa Burgess, Hershel Metterts, Ancile Howell, Porter Burgess, Floyd Morse, Wayne Clark, Orville Hines. . :Mr. and Mrs. Charles Wilson, Mrs.

J. S. Nicholson, Misses Olive, Irma,

LAFAYETTE3 Walter C. Skemp, r former Purdue university and Lafayette High school basketball player, is a member of the undefeated army basketball team of the Tours, France, base camp, which has gone through the season without losing a game.

ELWOOD Clean-up week began on Monday, when 118 boys of the city schools were deputized as special police to inform property owners of the requirements for cleaning up. City wagons will haul away rubbish free of charge.

ALEXANDRIA Members of the city council are planning to resist efforts of City Street Commissioner

Jesse Davis to collect his salary, following his dismissal April 7. They claim the office is a political one. Davis bas brought suit to recover the amount of his back pay. EVANSVILLE A race against death from France to Evansville by Opal Tolle, American overseas soldier, was lost when his wife died. He will not be Informed of the death until he returns. He had been given permission to return because of her precarious condition.

KENDALVILLE-'-When Henry Teders of Avilla, received a telephone message that his wife had died suddenly in a hospital in Michigan, he dropped dead.

NOBLES VILLE Allston Ogle, 18, charged with arson, was placed on trial in circuit court. He is charged with setting fire to the barn of Gilbert Hanna on February 27.

LAWRENCEBURG The building and grounds formerly occupied by

f A

The genuine American owned "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin" have Seen proved safe by millions for Pain, Headache, Neuralgia, Toothache, Earache, Rheumatism, Lumbago, Colds, Grippe, Influenzal Colds, Joint Pains, Neuritis. Proper dosage on every "Bayer" package. Boxes of 12 tablets Bottles of 24 Bottles of 100 Also Capsules. Aspirin U the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaoeticacide$ter of Salicylicacid

GARY Thomas Knotta, former mayor, bought a big touring car, second handed, three weeks ago from a man he said he'd known ten years. Now three detectives from Chicago have appeared to claim It as a stolen car, and it is in custody of Gary police.

ALEXANDRIA Mr. and Mrs. T. N. French, both 83, have just celebrated their sixty-third anniversary. He i3

and Helen Nicholson, Vera and Thel- the oldeB newsfnJ tV, t?,J

ma Strickler, Kenneth and Lowell

Nicholson, Ralph an Donald Wilson spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Minor Strickler near Sugar Grove.. ...Rev. and Mrs. Morris were entertained

ambulances and dreadful things that OTr8 UI 113 . w i inna ot it oo Sunday at dinner by Mr. and Mrs. B

XT. viuun. . . . .jm. uuu iuit. ecu vrai

and daughter of Economy spent Sun-

she just couldn't stand seeing her own father so broken, so beaten, so helpless and so racked with pain. One day when it was eunny and 8pringlshly warm, Annie lugged the baby over to Stuyvesant square. Tht baby scraped an infantile acquaintance with another baby and was googling over a pile of grass and pebbles that meant something to them. Annie sat On a bench trying to keep

When Postum is used instead of coffee there's an all around satisfaction in health and pleasure for everyone at table You do not have to stop at one cupful for fear of any harm, and children can drink it as safely as milk, for

POSTUM

Is healthful, delightful and economical . "There's a Reason

son county, and founded The Times

here in 1885.

COLUMBUS Ella Mae Frohman, 4, was miraculously saved from death after starting her father's automobile,

day with Mr. and Mrs. Everett How

ell .... Miss Hazel Farlow of Franklin, returned to .her home after a

week-end visit with the Misses Stan

ton. .Mrs. Alva Wilts of Indianapolis came Sunday to stay with her mother. Mrs. Mahala Ridee.. .Mr. and

Mrs. Walter Strickler and family of i

Sugar Grove spent Friday evening j with Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Nicholson and j family... . .Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Smith j and Mrs. Mary Hill visited relatives

in Richmond Sunday afternoon j Mr. and Mrs. Jessie Lamott of Cambridge City spent Sunday the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Clyde McMullen and lamily.. . . .Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Bond and son Forest were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Kinsey, south of Grensfork... ..Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Strickler of Economy, spent Friday the guests of the former's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Minor Strickler.. . . .Miss Grace Stanton left Monday to enter Richmond business college.. .Mr. and Mrs. Luther Hatfield, Mr. and Mrs. Elvin Benson and Miss Nellie Cummins spent Sunday evening with Mr. and Mrs. John Nicholson Charles Knote took his oldest son Horace to Indianapolis to consult a specialist, .... Mr. and Mrs. Sherman Trailer and children spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Earl Ridge and daughters, Helen and Kathyleen.. .Rev. Rector of Muncie, preached at the United Brethren church at Sugar Grove Sunday.

Dance Will Close Events

Of Season At Coliseum

The peddlers all say They don't like the way The housewives are learning, their schemes. No premiums made can securft their trade They buy of their grocers, it seemT

'ANxWi1'"'--

Harry Bradfield, manager of the Coliseum, announced Tuesday that he had scheduled one last event at the Coliseum. It will be a public dance. Every arrangement possible is being made to make the dance one of the biggest successes of the year as the Coliseum will be closed for such events after Saturday night. The floor will be waxed and in excellent shape for the dance. An orchestra has been secured to play for the evening's entertainment. A large number of people have already signified their intention to attend the affair and the Coliseum management is confident that the crowd will be one of the largest that

ever attended a Coliseum aublic dance.

he peddles

who mvBs

premiums and pretends to save yxni money; makes mcasysdQiipscr ccEee end other things, claiming they aroJust as good? Buy 8tan& axel goods of your rfroccr and. get? 5ull value. -.P. "JtftxlOT Spice C( Tbtedo, Ohio

emonts

Crackers m',

ular

Edg

Made

Pop

Folks use more crackers now than they used to, and wc cannot blame them. The oldfashioned cracker wasn't much to rave about. A few years ago The Green & Green Co., made a lighter, flakier, crispier, more palatable cracker and called it Edge-mont.

It met with instant approval. Since then Edgemonts have been imitated but you can easily identify them by the name that is baked in every cracker. Tomorrow when you give your grocery order don't say crackers say "Edgemonts." Your grocer will gladly get them for you because he too knows that you will like them better.

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