Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 44, Number 181, 13 May 1919 — Page 5
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM TUESDAY, MAY 13, 1919.
PAGE FIVE
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HOUSEHOLD HINTS j
By Mrs. Morton
J
Syrup
MENU HINT Breakfast. . Oranges French Toast C.Clttoa
Luncheon. Corn Omelet Lettuce and Onion Salad Cocoanut Custard Tea Dinner. Home-made Relish Broiled Steak New Potatoes Asparagus Lettuce Salad Banana Pie . Coffee TRIED RECIPES Pineapple Honey Three cups of grated pineapple, two cups sugar, three teaspoons lemon Juice. Wash and cut the pineapple into quarters and grate away the skins (skins are used for syrup), or wash, pare and put tnrough food chopper. To each three cups of fruit put two cups of sugar (one pound), and if the pineapple is very sweet, add bIi teaspoons lemon Juice, but if not. no lemon ie needed. Put fruit and sugar in saucepan and boil slowly until it has thickened, stirring occasionally. It takes about fortyfive minutes to one hour. This is particularly good on toast and saves butter. 8oup for Baby One-fourth pound lamb, few slices carrot, few slices of potato, small stem celery, teaspoon each of rice and barley. Cook all together until yery tender. Take out meat and put the vegetables through sieve. Season. Soup should be about the consistency of cream. Cinnamon Toast Cut stale bread in slices and spread lightly with butter or butter substitute. Mix two tablespoons of granulated sugar with a little cinnamon. Dust sugar and cinnamon lightly on buttered bread and toast a golden brown. This is very delicious with cocoa for school children.
Pineapple Turnover! Make a plain pastry dough, roll thin and cut into four-inch squares. Drain a can of crushed pineapple, saving the Juice for sherbets and sauces.. On each square put a large spoonful of pineapple, a small piece of butter and a spoonful of granulated sugar. Fold the squares into triangles, pinching the edges firmly together so that they will will not come apart in the process of cooking. Fry in deep lard tnd serve warm, dusted with powdered sugar. SUMMER SOUPS . Delicate soups can be made with the liquid in which peas, asparagus, celery, rice and other vegetables are cooked. This liquor should be made savory with pepper, salt, butter and minced parsely, and to each pint of It a pint of cream, slightly thickened with a teaspoon of cornstarch, should be added. This soup is light and delicious and is made more attractive by the addition of small, crisp croutons, browned in the oven. Instead of croutons, browned and toasted strips of bread, very thin and dainty, can be served. Bean Soup When boiling beans for baking boil more than needed to fill the pot. The extra amount allow to boil until very soft and then press them through a strainer. The pork boiled with the beans gives a very good flavor to the soup. Season with salt and pepper and then with a little water if desired not too thick, and serve with a slice of lemon. This recipe seems to be a good conservation of heat and energy as well as utilizing the water in which the beans were boiled, into which so tr.uch nourishment goes (of course the first water has been previously turned off the beans as 'soon as it came to a boil). Make croutons from dry bread or crumbs, slightly buttered and warmed in the oven.
HEART AND BEAUTY PROBLEMS
By Mr. Elizabeth Thompson
Dear Mrs. Thompson: (1) I am a young man of seventeen, but my dad persists in treating me like a kid. He won't allow me to go with girls at all and makes me take out my younger Bister instead. Do-you think a boy of my age who behaves himself is too young to go with girls? (2) My mother died six years ago and last year dad married again. Of course I know that was his own affair but I wasn't very keen about having a stepmother and I guess I acted badly. A lot of things had to be changed to suit her, including a good many of my ways not by her directly, but through dad, for he has been more fctrict with me than ever this last year, disciplining me several times. I claim I am too old for that, but my talk doesn't seem to go far. I have never dared to be discourteous toward her, for courtesy is one of dad'3 laws, but I certainly resent having to address her as "mother" and seldom speak to her except in a general way. Do you think it fair of my father to make me? She treats me with indifference, although she is nice and friendly to sis. (3) I am thinking strongly of leav
ing home. Dad gave me the impression he would have authority to compel me to return if I do. Would the law give him that authority? (4) He is very firm about my finishing high school and entering a university. He gives me an allowance, but he always has to know where I am evenings and I have to be in before ten. I want to go where I can have more liberty even if I do have to work. Do you think it would be all right to do so? BOB. (1) A boy of seventeen is very young to go with girls. Since your father objects, content yourself with boys a year or two longer. (2) I understand your feeling that there can be only one mother. But if I were you I would respect my father's wishes. Your home life will be happier if you submit in little ways. Be very thankful that your stepmother is good to your sister; so often a stepmother Is jealous of all the children. If you are considerate of her and give her love, doubtless she will return it. (3) Your father would have the authority to force you to return home, because you are not of age. (4) , Your father's firmness is en-
tirely for your own good. I must conI fess that I thoroughly approve. Do i not leave home and work, because you
win always regret it. University experiences will make you a bigger man some day.
Dear Mrs. Thompson: I am a young girl of fifteen and am bothered very much with pimples on my forehead only. Please advise me how to get rid
or mem. x. Y. Z. Above all, be careful of your diet,
anna- two quarts or water a day, sleep nine hours every night and exercise in the open air as much as possible. Often, applications of a lotion made from half an ounce of glycerine, a pint of camphor water and a quarter of an ounce of powdered borax will prevent
pimpies. in any event, this mixture is good for the skin, it used as a substitute for water. It must be allowed to dry on. . v - -, "'bear Mrs. Thompson: Does the juice of a lemon in the water when rinsing the hair injure the hair? My hair is dark brown with a red shade. When I use lemon juice the red shade shows more. I have never noticed any
my friends have said they would be
airaia to use it. GLADYS. Lemon juice is not injurious to the hair when used to the small extent you use it.
tewisville Nine Defeats Carthage Colored Team LEWISVILLE, Ind., May 13 The
fast Lewisville nine representing Henry county, continued its winning
streaK last isunaay defeating the strong colowd Carthage baseball team, 20-to-l, here. Lewisville played an errorless game and its pitcher only allowed the negroes one hit. The team is called the Razz Jazz Babies. As the team has defeated all other teams around Henry county, Manager Omar S. Peele is ready to book games with teams farther away. For games address Peele, business manager, Lewisville, Ind.
YOUNG MRS. ASTOR OPENS NEW EAGLE HUT IN NEW YORK
Mrs. Vincent Aator. Mrs. Vincent Astor, although back from her arduous duties as a canteen worker in France, is not taking a rest from her labors. Instead she has opened a new Eagle Hut at the Battery, New York city. This is bein managed in the same manner r- bet canteens in France
I tried to do to much and did it. Josh Billings.
Helps and Strengthens Never Hurts! This is one of the advantages of Postum over tea and coffee.
PO
inn
UM
is made of wholesome cereals, and is caffeinefree -one of the finest beverages conceivable for the entire familyyoung1 as well as old. Economical and delicious!
SAILOR KILLED BY "BOILED" SHELL
PHILADELPHIA, May 12. Explosion of a French .75 shrapnel shell which was being boiled to remove its' coating of paraffin, killed Harry Robbins, aged 30, Beriously injured his young sister and tore away the rear wall of his home. Robbins, a sailor, brought the shell home from a recent trip abroad. He made repeated efforts to extract the shrapnel, and finally resorted to boiling it to remove the paraffin from the nose. He placed the explosive in a tea kettle on the kitchen range, and he and his sister stood by watching the process. The heat caused a terrific explosion. Robbins' mother, who was also present, was uninjured.
HER IDEAL V Emma was going to study music. This definite ammtion on Emma's part spread - a contagion of resolution among the others. Louise wanted to be an actress. Ethel Putnam, who lived with two gaunt maiden aunts and a giant maltese cat across the street from Annie's flathouse, had social aspirations. She was going to marry a millionaire and have horses and carriages and servants and clothes and grand receptions and a box" at the opera. . Annie still held to Aunt Moggie as her ideal of independence and prosperity. - But when she told the girls she was going to be a stenographer and typewriter they curled scornful lips. That was no way to get rich and rise in the social world. Even Rose Rothberg, Annie's old friend of the east side tenement, who had moved slightly ' westward like the Hargans and was still a neighbor, was unfavorably disposed toward the typewriting idea. "I'm going to keep a store," said Rose. "A delicatessen and candy store," she added with twofold magnificence. "My father, he says, if you want to make a good living you should trade in something everybody has gotta have. People have gotta eat," she went on with creditable logic. "Leave us keep a store together, Annie you and me, yes? It's better." The Ideas were all good, Annie admitted. But her Aunt Moggie was a living, breathing example of Success, according to Annie's standards. She loved her Aunt Moggie so that whatever she did was touched with idealism. If Aunt Moggie had chanced to be a milliner instead of a secretary in a big publishing-house, millinery would have been Annie's goal. Besides, Annie hupged to herself the knowledge that she was further along in her ambitions than the other girls. She already knew a part of her trade-to-be. She had never ceased to be interested in the type-writing machine on her aunt's businesslike desk. Her small fingers could now actually find their swift way over the magic keyboard. And it had all come in the course of play, when she was so little that she had to sit on the dictionary and a pillow to reach up. When Annie was eight her compositions on Aunt Moggie's typewriter usually took the form of a letter to mother. Nowadays it was different. Her thirteen-jrear-old ideals were, like her fingers, bigger, more ambitious. She now preferred to write maxims from her copybook and verses from songs she sang in school. She admired all the handsome Spencerian legends such as "Honesty is the best policy" and "Procrastination is the thief of
time." But there were others she liked "better. "Perseverance conquers all things" was one. Annie traced this with infinite pains, rounding every letter perfectly, shading the down strokes, making the "q" and the "g" neatly plump and symmetrical, and , finishing with a decisive period. ,At the -top of page 7 stood forth In perfect copperplate the words, "There is nothing either good or bad, but thinking makes it so. Shakespeare." Here indeed was an inspiration. It bore out her daddy's very words, "You can do anything, Nancie, if you want it enough, and keep at it, and don't lose hope." There was another one, too: "As a man thinketh, so is he." The same promise again you can do anything, have anything, by hanging onto the idea and working toward it! Her father, her aunt, her copybook and this man, Shakespeare, all agreed. It must be true, then. It was very comforting to Annie. (To be continued.)
Webster, Ind.
Rev. Elwood Davenport of Chester
filled his appointment at the Friends 1
church Sunday. . . .The L O. O. P. lodge ot-Webster gave team work at Dublin last Friday night. ...A reception was given by members of the M. E. church last Wednesday evening for Rev. and Mrs. Morris of Williamsburg. Refreshments were served to 100 guests. Special music was given by Ralph Johnson of the Y. M. C. A. of Richmond and the Greensfork orchestra. Mrs. Elizabeth Haisley gave a reading welcoming the new minister. ...Rev. Mr. Morris conducted services at the M. E. church Sunday. ...Mrs. .Amanda Irvin is. very ill.... The infant child of Mr. and Mrs. Will Ryan died at the home west of here Sunday evening Mr. and Mrs. Toney Fry are the parents of a son, born at their home south of Webster Mr. and Mrs. Charley Hollingsworth visited Mrs. Naomi Plankenhorn Sunday. . . .Mr. and Mrs. Nickleson of Greensfork was the guest of Mrs. Dora Yundt Sunday. . ..Mr. and Mrs. Cleo Culbertson and family visited Fay Culbertson south of Centerville Sunday.
Tendency
to
Constipation?
USE THIS LAXATIVE! Dietitian advise a "careful diet, but that is trouble some to most people; physical culturistt advise "certain exercises," which is good if one has both the time and the inclination. Doctors advise diet and exercise and medicine. The question is, shall it be a cathartic or purgative medicine? Or a mild, gentle laxative? Thousands have decided the question to their own satis, faction by using a combination of simple laxative herbs with pepsin known to druggists, as Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin. A small dose gives a free, easy movement of the bowels. It is the best substitute for nature herself. In fact, since the ingredients are wholly from the vegetable H"gdom it may truthfully be said it is a natural laxative. Its positive but gentle action on the bowels makes it an Ideal remedy for constipation. The dose is smalL and it may be taken with perfect safety until the bowels are regulated and act again of their own accord. Tha druggist will refund your money if it taila to do as promised.
PRICE AS ALWAYS In spits of greatly increased laboratory costs due to the War, by sacrificing profits and absorbing war taxes w have mam tained the price at which this family laxative has been sold by druggists for the past
26 years. Two i
SOcandSLOO.
S Dr. Caldwell's YRUP OEPSIN The Perfect Si Laxative
FREE SAMPLES If yon have
Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin send for free trial bottle to Dr. W. B. Caldwell, 468 Washington St., Monticello. 1H- If there are babies at borne, nk for a copy of Dr. Caldwell s book. "The Care of Baby."
Greensfork, Ind. Mr. and Mrs. Rice Miller, John Fox, Mrs. Mary Downing and daughter Helen, Miss Freda Benbow and Miss Esther Jane Cummins spent Sunday afternoon with Mr. and Mrs. Morris Harrison at Hagerstown. Miss Freda Benbow is to make a visit with her mother, Mrs. Morris Harrison. .. .Miss Margaret Gause is improving. . .Shannon Neff gave a five-minute talk at Economy Sunday morning. . .The Neff Quartet gave several numbers at the Center Township Sunday-school institute Sunday afternoon. .. .Harry Hatfield of Dayton spent the week-end with his parents Mr. and Mrs. Kent Bane, Mr. and Mrs. Vinton Wilson, Misses Zelma and Virginia Wilson. Harry and Charles Bane and Howard Wilson motored to Campbellstown, O.. Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Verl Shaffer of Williamsburg took dinner with Mr. and Mrs. Charles Cummins and family Sunday The Ladies' Aid society of the Christian church gave an ice cream social Saturday night at the Kerr rooms.. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Lutz and daughter Eva spent Sunday afternoon with Mr. and Mrs. Pat Breen... Mr. and Mrs. Frank Underhill Bpent Sunday afternoon with Mr. and Mrs C. C. Smith.... Mr. and Mrs. Frank Simpklns and family spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Merritt Gilmer and daughters.... Misses Lena and Elizabeth Underhill, Esther, Agnes, Juliet and Elizabeth Smith, Arnold Underhill and Adelbert Underhill were the sruests of Misses live Tni-mn Uaion
and Mr. Kenneth Nicholson Sunday
anernoon uiay Township Sunday-
scnooi institute will be held Sunday, May 18, at 2:30 p. m. Campbellstown, 0. Granville Maddocka rvTnn errs f
WSWUSUl home from Reid Memorial hospital Wednesday and is improving from his recent operation for appendicitis..., John McGill was taken to Reid Memorial hospital Saturday so that his broken leg can be cared for. His other injuries are not thou eh tn ho
serious. . . .Ed Mikesell and family spent Sunday with Charley Cooper and family Miss Otia Sheffer visited Eaton relatives last week.... The freshman class met at the home of Miss Lois Stevens Wednesday evening Miss Treva Deem entertained a party of friends Friday evening. . The Y. P. C. A. met Wednesday evening with Miss Clara Aydelotte. The next meeting will .be June 4 at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Aydelotte.. .. .Frank Thompson and family leave for their home in Oregon Saturday evening after a month's visit with relatives and friends at Eaton and Campbellstown Miss Frances Earley of Middletown visited her aunt Mrs. J. S. McDivitt, from Friday until Sunday Cliff Gard, Clem Cohee and Mis3 Mary Huffman have bought new Cars.... Mrs. Lpon Prats' nnri hg).
Cambridge, Ohio, are visiting her par
ents, james snumate and family..... Mrs. Dave Cail is slowly improving from her recent severe illness. . .... Roy Turman and wife visits ho.
- tal ents Sunday.
It's the money saved out of what vou earn that counts.
There are 100 Edgemont Crackers in a Pound Yes, there are more Edgemont crackers to a pound, because Edgemonts are lighter, flakier, crispier, and we believe you will like them better than
ordinary crackers. They are made in a wholesome, clean, big cheerful bakery where happiness and health seem to be just baked into them.
J t W.aal i W lhrtat I. - vtr. 7W" .- 'lS
6 8 5 OflflTOfl 85800 000C
Dead
Weights
on Live
Tires
Every time your ' track , strikes a hole, the load,' dead, inanimate -artd tons heavy, , heaves and crashes down on the rear axle and
mechanism.
And with but one real shock absorber th Ares! Still if the tires have no; real give, no marked resilience, the mechanism must retain the shock and deprecia. tion and breakdowns; are hastened. . . Here is where GOODRICH DE LUXE Truck Tires daily save many dollars for operators in upkeep and depreciation. So deep and lively are DE LUXE treads as to absorb within themselves the most staggering road jolts. Then again they put more working rubber under the load because there is no tread rubber hidden below the top level of the steel channel base. In'consequence, whatever -your class of service, you may rest assured DE LUXE is the best, most economical "shock absorber you can put between road and load. - RODEFELD MFG. COMPANY 96 WEST MAIN STREET
