Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 44, Number 272, 29 August 1919 — Page 5

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEUKAM. FRIDAY, AUG. 29,

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Heart and Beauty Problems By Mrs. Elisabeth Thompoa

Dear Mrs. Thompson: I am a young lady -with a love for children apd am desirous of teaching kindergarten. Where can I get training? Where can I get any information? A CONSTANT READER I should advice you to see and ask a kindergarten teacher In the city who could no doubt give you all the information you desire.

Dear Mrs. 'Thompson:

Clover Seed Price of $39 A Bushel Legitimate, Says Whelan; $35 Paid Here

CHURCH NOTICE

tlon to the City Council. It was accepted immediately. "I am tired out and am going fishing," he said in a statei ment accompanying, the resignation.

Tungsten generally is called wolfram in Portugal and is sold by the mines as tungsten trioxide on the basis of its richness in tungstlc acid.

An extensive rg fn of pitchblende, from which raditfjai is obtained, h3 been discovered in southern Devonshire.

Dublin The Rev. W. A. Strickler will preach his first sermons at the

United Brethren church Sunday morn-

VERY GRATEFUL: Marry the man you love and forget the past. You were under the influence of an older man ajid very young then. You realize now that it was not real love. Marry this man and be happy. MRS. THOMPSON

Farmers in and around Wayne coun-

v (Ira TMt roioinrr mnrtVi ntntno rtfnr I

: i J? 2 1 in and evening. Services will be

for four years. We are about the , $30 a bushel, although the state food i hld l le Friends and Christian same age. He has told me that I am ; production committee of Indiana has ! f hurche,8 Sunday morning and eventhe o8ly girl he cares for. I told him i filed a complaint with the Governor ! ngl and the Methodist church Sunthat I did not believe it. He says that j 0f the state, declaring the $30-a-bushel i da evenn& a : 45 o cJock. I do not care for him. He is really 1 price is exorbitant. ! Stra"9n Christ an churc h The

the only boy that I have ever carea Omer Whelan, proprieter of a local reu wm uu. ma mst air

Whitewater Methodist church.. Ser-

price and small suppfy of clover seed j w, , be held SA mornins

can be attributed to the extreme hot'"1" "" . . , . o weather the early part of June and i .Eld, rad?v U " v r? 'f th firt ii n,o y,nr.a i school will be held at 9:30 o'clock Sun-

are also blamed, as their attacks on ! a&l, rnng'

for or can ever love. What should grain store, says he would not be sur-! Plntmonts for the conference year ...... . . . w . 1 1 . . " 1 a f t h q tY mh Qnniiov tv rr-r 1 rtr and

1 ten mm. snouia i lei mm kuu j prised if the price advanced to ?40 a . 7" """""" a

ttiat 1 care for him? 1 nave always , bushel. i

tried not to let him know that 1 carea Farmers say the reason for the high 1

for him. Do you unK ne reany cares for me. UNDECIDED If he has told you that he cares for you and you surely have an opportunity to know whether or not he does, you should not make him unhappy by being indifferent when you really care for him. You should let him know that you do care for him.

Household Hints By Mrs. Morton

TESTED RECIPES. Braised Beef (Can be cooked in Tireless cooker) Three pounds beef from lower part of round, two thin slices fat salt port, one-half teaspoon peppercorns, one-quarter cup carrot, one-quarter cup turnips, one-quarter cup onion, one-quarter cup celery, salt and pepper. Try out pork and remove scraps, wipe meat, sprinkle with salt and pepper, dredge with flour and brown entire surface in pork fat. When turning avoid pricking meat as juices will escape. Place on trivet in deep pan, 6urround with vegetables, peppercorns and three cups boiling water. Cover closely and bake four hours, basting every half hour. Turn at end of second hour. Serve with horseradish eauce. Horseradish Sauce Three tablespoons cracker crumbs, one-third cup

Chocolate Pudding Three table-

the cjover seed was very damaging. At a recent auction cf clover seed in

Middleboro church Sunday school

will be held as usual. There will be

Wayne county, the highest price bid , no church services.

Wl 1 9 Wl KJ SCI VltCS Will

was ?35 a bushel.

Florentine Players Give Varied Concert Program

hel, but Sunday school will be held at the usual time. Whitewater Methodist The Rev. Louis Ulmer will preach Sunday evening on "The Second Coming of Jesus Christ."

The Florentine Musicians gave two concerts at the Chautauqua, Thursday afternoon and evening and appear a-

1 gain Friday in two concerts. The '

spoons shortening, two-tmras cup group is composed or Andrew visso-i .iiuc, asn., Aug. zv. uie sugar, one egg, one cup milk, two cups chi. accordian; Miss Olga Capuccio, j Hanson, Seattle's mayor, who gained flour, four teasDoons baking powder, violin; Miss Rosemond Wright, pian- 'nation-wide notoriety as a result of hid

two squares unsweetened chocolate, j ist; and Miss Sabra Dyer, reader.

one-quarter teaspoon salt. - ineir programs were light and var

Cream the butter, add the sugar

gradually and the egg well beaten. Sift the dry ingredients and add alternately with the milk to the first mixture, then stir in the melted chocolate. Turn into an oiled mold, cover and steam two hours. BAKING HELPS Bread One cup liquid, one teaspoon sugar, one teaspoon shortening, onefourth of one cake of yeast, about three cups flour. Rolls One cup liquid, one teaspoon sugar, one-fourth of one cake of yeast, about three cups flour. Muffins (Breakfast) One cup

grated horseradish root, and one-half j liquid, one teaspoon sugar, one tablecups milk, three tablespoons butter, j spoon shortening, one-fourth of one one-half teaspoon salt, one-eighth tea- j cake yeast, one egg, two cups flour, spoon pepper. Muffins (Tea) One cup liquid Cook first throe ingredients twenty ; one-fourth cup sugar, two tablespoons minutes in double boiler. Add butter, j shortening, one-fourth of one cake of salt and pepper. yeast, one egg, two cups flour.

A Chance to LiveBy Zoe Beckley

THE FIGHT FOR LIFE Annie learned much of the terrific struggle of the foreign poor in this Land of the Free, from the Rothbergs' reminiscences, the Rafetzkys' sufferings during the strike, and the eternal battles fought by other of her neighbors for mere life and sustenance. She came to know children who had never owned a toy in the,ir lives. Men of twenty and more who had never possessed a new suit of clothes who bought every poor rag and boot they owned from a musty cellar where the best was third or fourth hand! She saw seven-year-old boys selling papers in the streets, hiding their pennies in their shoe to "keep the cop from findin' "em." In the house next door lived a woman who stood at the corner of a certain street till 2 o'clock in the morning tending her newsstand, through the bitterest days of winter, through the burning days of summer, through sickness, through many terms of approaching motherhood She found an urchin one day in. the lot behind her flat burying somertiing very small wrapped hi paper. Carefully he marked the spot with a discarded rusty kettle. When the child saw Annie watching him he leaped protectingly toward his treasure. But she caught and questioned him. The poor little devil, it seemed, had found in the street a dime! Fearing robbery if he carried so prodigious a sum about upon his person, he thought to hide it where he could come back and look at it each day till he could decide its disposition. Annie assiwd him it would be safe that she would watch

the spot from her window. The little lad believed her, and went upon his way feeling a capitalist. She heard a small girl say to another one day: "Ooooh; they got loads and loads of money. Whaddyer think? They got a whole cake of white stuff in the kitchen to scrub the dirt off p;ins with! They buy it just special for that. They don't use ashes. You just rub it on a rag-like, and wipe the pans and they get clean!" There was incredulity on the other child's face at the tale of this prodigal spending. Annie could see she was searching hor mind for some story of equal impresslveness. "There's a girl in our house," she narrated with an expression that said, "You won't believe this, but it's true," "that gets a white roll with butter on It every single day when she comes

home from school! She dassent eat it

on the street, 'cause they'd all want bites. She goes under the stairs in the hallway. I seen her!" Annie mulled it all over in her mind, trying to understand why there was such poverty, wondering if she Bernie would ever get out of it, or whether they would go on, getting poorer and more helphess and hopeless each year, until they viewed life soddenly or sullenly like most of those around her. If Bernie had been asked Just when things first began to be utterly depressing at home he would have been at a loss to say. The sliding down was very gradual. There had teen an evening when he noticed thing3 seemed different not tidy. Ani.ie's work-dress was shabby and soiled, carelessly turned in at the neck for coolness. She looked nerve strained and weary. Damp wisps of hair drooped about her face. The children were noisy or fretful, according to each one's degree of health. Tlie supper table appeared carelessly laid, the meal unappetizing and scant. Had this been before the fourth baby's advent, wondered fiernie. Or afterward, during that trying time when Annie could not -recover her strength, and the work, the bills and the general anxiety piled up till it seemed each day brought something new to worry about? Or had it been still later, during the little poor baby's sickness, when Annie did not sleep for three terrible nights, and the-.

neighbors came in and helped, and said it was "summer complaint" and they had better send him to the hos pital quick? (To be continued.)

ied, giving each performer a solo appearance.

BOWMAN ON ROOSEVELT ORGANIZATION COMMITTEE

Organization plans are rapidly being whipped into shape for the Roosevelt memorial compaign, which will be conducted during the week of October 20-27, said W. C. Bobbs, state chairman, with headuarters in Indianapolis. la. S. Bowman, formerly of Richmond, has been named on the finance committee, of which Albert Sahm, of Indianapolis, is chairman.

OLE HANSON RESIGNS.

stand during the general strike here ! last February presented his resigna-

CAPITAL ACTORS STRIKE

WASHINGTON. Aug. 29. The actors and theatrical employes' strike, which has closed theaters in New York and Chicago, spread tonight, to Washington. Stage hands and musicians at the Shubert-Belasco theater here walked out immediately belore the performance of "Up From Nowhere" was to have begun.

HONOR FOR PERSHING WASHINGTON, Aug. 29. In recognition of Geueral John J. Pershing's services in the war, the house Thursday passed a bill authorizing the president to confer on him the permanent rank of General. The measure now goes to tho senate.

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First Aid for Laundry Troubles If every wash-day is a day for the C?hiea" tho rvjht, "blue will send thuta scuttling away. Bed Cross Bail Blue is th secret of successful washing ; Pure White, dazzliDg clothes that leaves thn happy snile of satisfaction nt tho end of a day of hard work. 5 Cents. AS Your Grocers'

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High-Bred Cows Healthy and Sanitary Regularly Inspected

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NUFACTURro rnoM Btf "Uie or pure

WHEAT

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v Or PURE 55LKCI ev WHCAT j&?

ST. LOUIS. Ma - ST. J-

1 ney oulcl have i i

Give them the products iof your baking skill the healthful, nourishing, wholesome, home-made; kind. It is so easy to bake right wlien the flour

is nght and it is econon lical. Valier's Enterprise Flour is made especially fine in quality and te:cture, particularly for home use. So gi eat 13 the appreciation or this super lative flour that millions of sacks are sold yearly. Surely a flour that has deli; r,htcd go many is worth trying. Phone yovr grocer today

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"Community" In Valier'a biSb - Srad popular pxlcad flaus.

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"The Cow in the Pantry"

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The Finest Milk Produced In America The Result of 20 Years of Expert Effort to Produce a Super-Grade

Van Camp Products Co. Indianapolis, Ind.

Milk That Is Safe The Van Camp experts have spent twenty years in perfecting milk production. Now we have seven condenseries model plants in great dairying districts. The dairies are sanitary. The cows are high-bred. They are regularly inspected. Then this clean . milk is sterilized after sealing. So it comes to you germfree. For drinking and for infants you vant milk that is safe.

Double-Rich Milk All we do is to evaporate over half the water at low heat in a vacuum. Nothing is added, nothing else subtracted. It comes to you like thick cream. You can dilute it even for coffee and ice cream. For drinking you add at least an equal part of water. For cooking you may add more. You simply replace the water. Ever At Your Call In Van Camp's you have the finest milk in America ever at your call. It costs less than bottled milk. You have small cans and large cans, so you open what you want. There is no waste. You never have too much milk, and you never have too little. So this rich, safe milk, with all its convenience, is also economical. Get a fev cans from your grocer. Compare it with the milks you know. You will be surprised at the ideal milk the Van Camp methods bring you.

Managing Men in Richmond "Men Would Better Skip This"

It's a frightful drop eleven or thirteen stories from the heights of courtship to the prosaic depths of married life. Yes "depths" is the word. For a man must sink pretty low t' make cutting remarks about the biscuits he once spoke of so highly. No one but a deep-dyed villain could talk like this to his own v.-edded wife, less than a year from the honeymoon "How do you 'spect me to do a day's work on a brea"kfas' like this ? that's what I want to know. Call these fresh egjrs? Why "even the tate'--. frozen out of 'em. And there's no 'kick' in that coffee a-tall. And that toast say, it's burned to a crisp and harder 'n Pharaoh's heart 'n " "Oh-o-o you cruel t-t-t!iing. Those are farm eggs, they " "Those were farm eggs, you mean, in 1917, before they went on ice." Of course. Madam, nothing like this ever goes on in your househoM still, the talk may sound familiar. Seriously, though, feeding men is a regular business and how wonderfully well some women manage it! Those successful

men managers seem to divide their business into four departments : Buying, Keeping, Cooking, Serving.

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Buying food for the home ; isn't learned in a minute. The sensib' le "Domestic Science" course in tli modern school teaches the young rirl how to buy food, but the pupil'si tmind isn't always on her work. Well, buying food wisely doesn't come naturally, but it does fina lly come to the young wife who realigns its importance and who is willing to learn. The reason why the meais, are so good in the average Richmond home is because all the successful home-managers here are going to sell ool igain are learning through artles in the PALLADIUM of the eneifcry-value in foods how to buy,.how to serve, how to save. That dinner that your serjuor partner enjoyed so much last Si;mdav Psh! she got it our of the PALLADIUM. The home-manager wbio manages men is safe in relying on; the PALLADIUM as her invariable; , and reliable food buying guide, bqrause all the best things in the foodilline are naturally advertised here i rrhere the advertiser gets the best bipyers for the money. A good dish, ladies, is, f better than soft words "to turn away wrath" and it iis still true

that; "the way to a man's heart is t h i rough his stomach." You'll soan qualify as a fully -fledged ma n-manager if

in

The Richmond Palladinmill