Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 44, Number 190, 23 May 1919 — Page 5

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM

FRIDAY, MAY 23, 1919. PAGE FIVE

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HOUSEHOLD HINTS 1

By Mrs. Morton

TODAY'S BEST RECIPES. Apple, Data and Celery SaladPare one large choice apple, quarter, core and cut Into small pieces and

squeeze over inese tne luice of half a lemon. Cut five choice stalks ol celery In small pieces. Pour boiling water over half a pound of dates. Stir the water through them, skim to an earthen dish and dry in the oren. When cold cut each into four or five lengthwise pieces. Mix the apple, celery and dates together, then add a generous half cup of mayonnaise dressing and mix again. Serve on heart lettuce leaves. Bean Soup Two cups leftover beans, one-half can tomatoes, one onion cut fine, two bay leaves, six cloves. Cook BlOWlV two hour. Strain arid

a small piece of butter, salt and pepper. - ., , Potatoes and Peas en CasseroleSlice or dice cold boiled potatoes, put In casserole. Open can of peas. Take one-half can peas and liquor, pour over potatoes. Beat one egg and use a generous one and one-half pints of milk. Stir egg Into milk. Add salt and pepper to taste and stir through potatoes. Add bits of butter on the top and bake. Crystal Ized Pickles At this time of the year when canned pickles are getting low, buy one dozen mediumsized plain pickles (must not be flavored), cut in round slices one-fourth Inch thick, put in a crock, add three cups of white sugar and cover. Will be ready in three days to serve. They

HEART AND BEAUTY PROBLEMS By Mrs. Elizabeth Thomvsoii

are excellent to serve with any meats. CASSEROLE DISHES. Casserole of Kidney After soaking and skimming the kidneys, brown in suet fat and put In the casserole, shaking and skimming the kidneys; fry a small sized onion and add two potatoes and three carrots cut in cubes. Cover with stock. Place the casserole cover on tightly and cook for three and a half hours. Serve in

casserole. Casserole of Liver and Beans Two cups of baked beans, one cup of chopped liver, one cup of sliced boiled potatoes, one teaspoon of salt, onefourth teaspoon of pepper, one cup of tomato sauce. Line a greased baking

dish with alternate layers of beans, potatoes and liver, sprinkling each layer with seasoning and chopped onion. Pour the tomato juice over all and bake the whole in a moderate oven lor thirty minutes. Casserole of Liver with Vegetables Have the liver cut in thin slices. Cover with hot water and let stand for five or six minutes. Have par

boiled three medium sized potatoes,

three carrots, one onion and one tur

nip, all of which should have been

diced. First, place the vegetables in

the casserole, then the liver dredged in flour, and then two green peppers minced. Season with salt, pepper, thyme and sweet marjoram. Pour in a half pint of stock and a half pint of hot water. Sift a table-spoon of flour over the top, cover and bake for one hour.

Dear Mrs. Thompson: I am a girl Just sixteen. When I was smaller I lived In " the country. I never had any one except my brother to play with. When we moved to town there were so many children to play with that it made me feel out of place. Being used to my brother's company only, I always have liked boy com

pany better than that of girls.

The girls seem to like me all right,

but I cannot have a good time with

them. If a girl is seen in just one 1

boy's company all the time other boys and girls say she has quite a case. If she is seen in the company of a lot of different boys they say she is everybody's girl. What should a girl do? I like them only as friends. , Two girl friends of mine thought we could have a good time If we had some boy friends over some Friday night. They came and we danced and played games. The boys and girls wanted to play "Clap in and Clap Out" and some other kissing games. I did not, because I had always been told

never to let a boy kiss me. I do not

myself see anything wrong with it, for

one might Just as well touch their hands as their lips. We only touched our lips together. They played the games and went home. We asked them to come again some time, and they , said they would. What would you suggest for us to play next time? VENA. A girl should be very careful to do the right thing. When she is sure

that her conduct cannot be criticised justly, she does not need to worry j about what people think. Go with more than one boy, but choose all your ; friends slowly and wisely. - A girl who goes with any and every boy who will pay her attention does cheapen her ! reputation. Do not play kissing games. People of good taste do not. Cards or other

table games are so much better, I j

think.

A VI8IT TO YETTA'S PLACE OF EMPLOYMENT Annie longed for the occupation that would at least bring her into over-the-counter contact with people who had both leisure and wealth. Perhaps some day, somehow, by Just studying them and selling them things she could learn the way to fortune and to power. There were the girls Annie could barely glimpse them as the store doors swung open with their neat skirts and blouses, their white collars, their stylishly-done hair and saleslady-like smiles, showing this or that article, giving its price, praising its quality, taking down boxes from stock or using the new-fangled

trolley-baskets that slid from counters

' to cashiers' desks, doing the work

Annie used to do in the basement at

Rourke's and upstairs at Keller's.

She turned resolutely from temptation and hurried her footsteps toward the dingy loft building farther downtown. She reached It at last, in a aide street not far from Broadway. Instead of carriages, horseless or otherwise, heavy wagons filled this thoroughfare. The pavements were choked with the litter of commercepacking boxes, crates, bales of goods, hand trucks and the human forces that moved and managed them. The air was filled with noise and dust No one here was being polite and elegant. No one apparently was dreaming of the perfumed paths of life. This was the uglier mechanism by which the ladles In the carriages were provided with their staples and their luxuries. This was Annie's realm. Beside the loft building's entrance

a crude sign was twisting in the wind, scrawled with crayon upon a cardboard box cover, hung by a string to a nail: "Learners Wanted on ladle's Waistes. Apply Circle Waist Company, top floor." -Annie went in and entered the shabby elevator, along with several errand boys, who bumped her with bundles, a few girls who were also looking for work, and a couple of smug men with

good clothes and cigars which they took out from heavy lips and held in heavy, protecting hands while the cage slowly and with rickety Jerks climbed upward. They looked at Annie and the other half-grown girls and brushed against them unnecessarily as they resumed their cigars and got out at the seventh floor. Annie went to the ninth. Yes, a Bhirtsleeved man told her, there were two or three places for beginners. Had she any experience at machines? No? Did she know any girls there? Yetta Kaplin? Very well, she could step this way and see the foreman and maybe he'd give her a machine next to Yetta's. Annie and the man had been talking in a small office formed by a wooden partition. There was a whirring sound and the sound of metal wheels being shoved rapidly along wooden floors. The man opened a door and suddenly Annie beheld what seemed to her acres upon acres of rows of girls with bent heads sitting before zizzing ma

chines from which they never for an

Dear Mrs. Thompson: I am a girl nineteen years of age and am considered good looking. I can make up with strangers very quickly. 1 Should a girl invite a boy to come to see her sometime, the first time she meets him? 2 Would it be all right for her to write him a letter of friendship? 3 Is it right to ask a boy whether he loves you or not?

4 When a boy lives in another town is it all right to tell him to

write? ANXIOUS. 1 The girl should let the boy make the request to call. 2 It is all right for her to write to him if she receives a letter from him first. 3 No. He will tell you if he does love you. 4 Do not tell him to write. If he wants to correspond he will suggest it.

Indiana News Brevities

ELWOOD Charles G. Lawson, 50, foreman of the pot factory of the Pittsburg , Glass company, was crushed by a heavy stone and received injuries from which, he died. SEYMOUR Thirty-two owls and twenty-one , hawks have been caught by Louis Richart in steeltraps on the top of a number of poles 25 feet high, and other farmers near here are following his example. KOKOMO A drive to nhfuin How-

ard county's allotment of ?7,000 in the

baivauon Array s service fund campaign was completed in one day. Workers started out at S nVlnrk in

the morning and finished at 6 in the

evening.

uaki ram uiausen, 13, was drowned in the Froebel swimming

tank here while 18 other boys were

in the water. It is believed he suf

fered an attack of heart failure.

Alexandria Dr. C. D. Schurtz, of this city, lost a new automobile when

a spray of gasoline found Its way to a

red-hot muffler. Schutx smelled burning paint and found the rear end of

his car in flames. He was compelled

to abandon It and watch It burn. SEYMOUR A remonstrance was filed with the county commissioners against the forming of Pershing township from the east part of Salt Cdeek township. Residents declare their taxes will be too high if tho change Is made.

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instant raised their eyes. The noise now became a roar. The air was hot and dusty with myriads of fine particles. It was 6tuffier than the basement at Rourke's department store. (To be continued.)

Masonic Calendar

Friday, May 23 King Solomon's Chapter, No. 4, R. A. M. Call convocation, work in Royal Arch degree.

NEW RECORD MADE IN PLANE FLIGHT

'Br Associated Press) WASHINGTON, May 23. A new time record for airplane flights was announced today by the war department upon receipt of an official report that Major Adlal Gilkeson, of the army air service, had flown from New York City to Portland, Me., yesterday, a distance of 500 miles in 250 minutes.

Evangelism Urged To Eradicate Bolshevism

(By Associated Press) ST. LOUIS. Mo., May 23. EvangelIsm as a means of eradicating Bolshevism and I. W. W.'ism was advocated by the board or home missions in its renort to the general assembly of the

Presbyterian church today. Unless the masses are taught the principles of religion. . the mad fury of Bolshevism, with its twin scourge, atheism, will become universal, warned the report. The report recommended increasing the number of missionaries in lumber camps and industrial centers as a method to check the doctrines and urged establishmen of immigrant communities to Christianize and Americanize foreigners. Publication of religious periodicals in foreign languages as a means of bridling radicalism and "arousing Christian civic consciousness," was recommended in a report

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2 level cups of flour 1 level teaspoon salt 1 level teaspoon Calumet cup shortening Baking Powder cup cold water How to mak it Stft together the dry tngreitents. work in the shortening, moisten to a dough with as little cold water as possible. Be sure to cut out and paste this recipe in your recipe book for future reference. Of the many thousands of different pie crust recipes, you'll give this "better one" your preference. NOTE THIS When you buy a pound of Calumet you get a full pound 16 oz. Some high priced baking powders are now being put on the market in 12-ounce cans instead of a pound. Be sure you are getting a p6uhd when you want it. No short weights with Calumet.

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Buy Style as Well as Clothes

When a man wears a new suit of clothes, no one pays the slightest attention to him, unless possibly a pal says: "My, Joe, who wished the loud plaid on you? Not a word about cut or style. But when a woman appears in a new costume, this is what happens: "I see that Mrs. Next-Door has a new gown," remarks one neighbor to another, "that pannier effect is very becoming to her, but it would never do for me." Not a word about fabric. The woman's season to season interest is centered on the one feature Style. Style the intangible, the elusive, the indescribable! Style the key to the purse, the. desire in the wo

man s heart, tne thing she wants to transfer from her mind to her back! Style where can it be found?

One man will take five yards of this, two yards of that, a length or two of lace, a handful of sequins and enough ribbon and will fashion them into an artistic unison. WTien he gets through, the materials with which he began have been blended into a harmonious and distinctive whole ; like clay to the potter or colors to the artist, they have been merged into a mode, created into a new Style! Folks have come to depend on specialists for advice and satisfaction, just as a man doesn't consult "A" on contracts because "A" is a lawyer who specializes in patents and trade marks. And the woman who seeks' style, who wishes to buy appearance as well as clothing with her dress appropriation, must do the same thing. . All the style

snops aren t on any one street, nor can you tell just by looking at them which are the real thing. The best way is to

pi$Pi in Th Richmond Pallajiumj