Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 44, Number 279, 6 September 1919 — Page 5
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, SATURDAY, SEPT. 6, 1919.
PAGE FrtfE
Household Hints By Mrs. Morton
THE 8ALAD COURSE. Tomato Jelly Salad One pint tomatoes, one slice onion, one teaspoon salt, one-eighth teaspoon pepper, two tablespoons granulated gelatine, let7' ":e, mayonnaise. Cook tomatoes with onion, salt, pppper for twenty minutes; strain and add gelatin which has been soaked in one-quarter cup cold water, and stir until gelatin is dissolved; pour into small molds which have been dipped in cold water. Let harden in a cool place. When ready to serve turn out on salad plates garnished with lettuce. Mayonnaise poured around the 6ides of the molded jelly complete the salad which is very attractive in appearance. Water Cress Salad Put in saladbowl a layer of cress, then add a layer of boiled and sliced carrots, then a layer of cold boiled beef. Mash with salad dressing, sprinkle with a few capers, and a bit of pimento. Very
good looking and very satisfying. The following is a recipe for salad dress
ing One teaspoon dry mustard, one teacup vinegar one teacup hot mustard, one teacup of vinegar one teacup hot water, one-half teaspoon salt, one-quarter teaspoon paprika, two table-spoons sugar, two tablespoons flour.-two tablespoons butter, one egg or two yolks. Mix dry ingredients, add egg, vinegar and water, blend with butter, soak until thick. Daisy Salad Arrange leaves of lettuce, putting two leaves together to form a shell, rub yolks of four hardboiled eggs through a strainer and moisten with salad dressing. Cut the whites in rings. Place on lettuce for daisy petals and yolks in center. Serve more dressing with the salad. Rice Vegetable Salad One-half cup each celery, carrots and rice. Marinate all separately with French dressing. Arrange on lettuce leaves in shape of a mound, having rice at the bottom and carrots at the top.
soliciting and handled all of the big! jobs hereelf and because she had !
worked In a large plant, she often knew Just the kinds of forms they needed or Just the kind which were best fitted for different Durnoses. It
j was" knowing just Buch little things l as these which made her more suc
cessful than many of her competitors. Eventually she had to move to new quarters and hire a regular corps of workers, who worked in shifts. She took her brother in with her and made
! him office manager. Today Ida is
thirty-three years old. She is owner and manager of the Harris Printing Company, which is the largest firm of its kind in. a large manufacturing city, and she is the only woman in the city running such a business. She can name among her patrons almost every
firm of any size in the city and many
outside concerns. She built her busi
ness up in less than ten years and she Is now able to provide every comfort and luxury for her invalid mother.
Heart and Beauty Problems By Mrs. Elizabeth Thompaom
Dear Mrs. Thompson: I don't suppose I need to tell you, I never did get out to the coast, for this is proof enough of a brainstorm I mean my writing again after giving my word I wouldn't. The important one of my cousins, the aviator, got the flu soon after I wrote. He didn't last long after pneumonia set in and then dad called my trip off. With him gone, I wasn't so crazy about it anyway. He was in all kinds of heavy fighting for thirteen months over there and came home with only a few scars and a punctured lung. I want to correct something I said last time about flunking one of my studies. I was positive I did at the time, but when I got my grades I f6und I had just made it. This sort of vacation has no charm for me. A fellow gets tired of movies and picnics and iced tea and Savanarola now you know how well I am minding. I'd like just for one happy month to do what I please stroll downtown Saturday nights, take dad's car for Fome joy rides drink all the coffee I want, have some swims in the
river, see the inside of a dance garden for once, trade my W. S. stamps for a canoe, get up any old time I please, and lounge around Sunday morning without any order to dress for church. Many thanks for your help, and here's hoping you are having a "heap lot" better summer than me. BOB. Your plans for the summer certainly had a sad ending. It was a pity that your cousin should lose his life
here after coming back from war full
of hope that he would regain his for
mer health. I am sorry, too, that you
could not have the pleasant time
with him you expected.
I think you should tip your hat to your sister. It will pay to train now for the man you want to be some day. I enjoy your letters and so do many of my readers, because in their letters they have mentioned you with interest. Thank you for wishing me so pleasant a summer. It has been very enjoyable, doubtless because I have reached and passed the enviable age of twenty-one.
A Chance to Live By Zoe Beckley
Mayor Zimmerman and lew Shank to be Stars in Moose Minstrel Show Mayor "Doc" Zimmerman of Richmond and ex-Mayor Lew Shank of Indianapolis will be the principal funmakers In the big Moose minstrel which will be presented at the Murray theatre next Thursday and Friday evenings. The minstrel will be given by Wayne Lodge No. 167 Loyal Order of Moose and will be one of the big amusement events of the coining season. Thirty local footlfght favorites will take part in the production. Some of the featured comedians will be Benton Barlow, William (Billy) Lewis,
John Haffner, Lew Geier Elmer Wil-
dig and Judson St. Clair, while some of the singers will be Joe Wessel, Raymond Wildig, Howard Hitz and Urban Gausepohl. In addition to the gorgeous first part there will be three high class vaudeville acts and six reels of feature pictures making a three-hour show in all. The perform-
Jance will start at 8 p. m. sharp. The
reserved seat sale wm open at tne Murray box office at 9 a. m. Monday.
THE HOST DEFEATED A few days later Annie, on her way down to see Rose Gubln, chanced upon a little curtain-raiser to the melodrama of suffering which had beer in preparation upon the east side for months. Annie had Just enough knowledge of "uptown" methods to know that when a customer there is overcharged at his provision store he protests, amiably or otherwise, accord
ing to his disposition. The matter is explained or not, according to the disposition of the proprietor. If the ad
justment is not satisfactory, the up-
towner takes his trade elsewhere. That ends it, except that if the price is still extortionate the prosperous citizen complains that "the cost of living is becoming something outrageous but what are you going to do about it?" And he does nothing except compare sympathetic notes with friends. With an east side housewife it is
different. Her metohds are direct. When onions that have been costing four cents are raised to five on all the pushcarts that choke her familiar streets, her protest is made in no uncertain terms. She cannot trade at the shops because pushcart prices are all she can afford. The onions must come down to four cents, or she must go without onions. So long as onions are not Indispensable she renounces onions, or haggling and fuming, buys as many as she can for her four cents. When her five-cent loaf of bread, however, costs suddenly seven; when the milk she must have for her children Is increased to fourteen cents a quart, she does not stop at haggling, she fights. Her primitive mother Instinct, fanned by her native emotionalism, becomes
a sweeping flame. It w-as upon the kindling of one of these flames that Annie chanced,
True Stories of Successful Women By Edith Moriarty
LEVINSKY-GREB BOUT IS POSTPONED TO SEPT. 12
DAYTON, O., Sept. 6. Announcement was made here today that the twelve round bout between Battling Levlnsky, light-heavyweight champion of the world, and Harry Greb, the Pittsburg battler, scheduled for Sep tember 8, has been moved to September 12. The date for the boxing match was changed in order to give Greb a longer training period. The bout will be held at Highland ball park.
American shoes are in high favor among all classes of Chinese.
Cincinnati Policemen
Hosts to New Yorkers
(By Associated Press) CINCINNATI, Sept. 6. Cincinnati policemen who are members of the George Washington garrison army and navy union, whose annual en
campment is to be held in this city
September 10 to 13, are making special arrangements to entertain General George B. McClellan garrison No. 77, the members of which are policemen of New York City. Notices sent
out by the cammander of this garri
son indicate a majority of the one thousand members will attend. A committee of Cincinnati police
men are arranging a special program
for the New York police.
turning into the ghetto street where the Gubins lived. A stout woman with a shawl was negotiating at a peddler's stand for potatoes. Her voice was suddenly raised to furious anger. The bearded huckster matched her tones with his own. As the dispute fulminated other women stopped on the crowded pavement, listening sympathetically sympathetically, that is, to the woman. A few joined in. The others gathered round until the street became impassable at that point. "Gozlan! Robber of my children!" cried the woman, waving a potatoarmed fist in the peddler's face. A wild chorus of protest in Yiddish followed. Dozens of other women, whose wrath had been smoldering for days, burst forth with a vigor born of their desperate plight. Heads poked out from windows. Customers ran from little neighborhood shops in the midst
of their buying. They, too, had been haranguing and shaking angry fists at dealers who dared charge seven cents for bread. (To be continued.)
CUTICURA HEALS SKIN JROUBLE On Face. Itched and Pimples Came In Blotches. Face Was Disfigured. "I saw black spots on my face, and then they got on my nose.
They started itching and pimples came. The pimples came to a head and were large and hard, and were in blotches. My face was disfigured. "I saw an advertisement for Cuticura and sent for
a sample. I bought more, and I used three cakes of Cuticura Soap and two boxes of Cuticura Ointment when I was healed." (Signed) Joseph Tellone, 927 Loomis St., Chicago, I1L, Aug. 21, 1918. SCuticura Toilet Trio "Wl Consists of Soap, Ointment and Talcum. Use the Soap, and no other, for every-day toilet purposes, with a little Ointment now and then as needed to soothe and heal the first signs of skin or scalp troubles. Use Cuticura Talcum for dusting your skin. It is an antiseptic, prophylactic, cooling, soothing powder of fascinating fragrance. SunpU Euh Tm br UtH. AMrmt cost-fwd : "OiUovt, Dept. S. boatoa " Sold mrrwhn. Soap Z&c. Oiocmcot 2fc and SOe. Tiieum 26c.
Ida Harris lived with her mother and brother at the edge of the business section of a large manufacturing city. She attended the public schools, but not very regularly, for her moiher was an invalid and Ida often had to stay home to care for her and do the housework. For this reason it took her two extra years to get through the grammar grades and when she was alm.ost seventeen she left school. She wanted to go on to high school, but she decided that it would not be quite fair because her broth"- supported the family, and he could not afford to let her go to high school, especially when she had to stay home almost every other day. She went to a niultigraph school instead. The only explanation she can give for choosing a multigraph school was the fact that the girl who lived next door to her went to one. She finished the course in about twice the usual time and started to work in a multigraph department of a large steel company for twelve dollars a week. She was a very good operator and liked the work, but it was rather monotonous and often there were days at a time when she would have little to do. By applying herself and working hard she acquired great speed and in a year she was the best multigraph operator in the department. The only thing which held her back was the
fart that she so often had to stay j
home because she could get no one to I stay with her mother. Regardless of that fact, however, she was head or" ' the multigraphing department at the end of I wo years and was earning J twenty-five dollars a week.
Learned to Set Type. ' The steel plant where she worked had a printing department also and Ida used to spend all of her spare time learning how to set type and teed a press. Before f-he was made head of the multigraphing department she would often help set up different forms and if the job were not an important one she would pull the proofs. She became very qujck and very expert at this in a short time and before .-he was given her new position she had run the whole department aione one day when the head printer was ill and his assistaut was away. After she became head of the multivraphing department, however, she had very little time for anything else, but her little experience with printing made her long to take up that work. She remained with the steel company about six years and then she decided that she would try to get work nearer home, where she could spend more time with her mother. There seemed to be nothing for her to do. and after looking about she had just about decided to go back to the steel plant when she heard of a printing shop not many blocks away. She went there nd applied for a job. The shop was a small one. and the proprietor did all of the work himself, but he needed an assistant just at that time because he had a large job to get out on short notice and so he hired Ida as a temporary helper. Ida found the work rather easy and she could go home at noon, which made it much more pleasant for her mother. When the first big job was finished Ida expected to get her money and her dismissal, but more work came up and she remained to help with that. Then the printer decided YOUR ATTENTION, PLEASE. If your bowels need a wholesome physic that thoroughly cleanses, sweetens the stomach and benefits the liver, take a Foley Cathartic Tablet tonight and you will feel better in the morning. It is a quick and safe remedy for sick headache,, biliousness, bloating, sour stomach, gas, bad breath, indigestion, constipation or other condition caused by clogged or irregular bowels. Foley Cathartic Tablets cause no griping or nausea. For sale by A. G. Luken & Co. Adv.
to give her a permanent job If she wanted it. That was just what Ida did want. She worked by the hour for hlra and usually made more a week than she had at the steel plant. Starts Her Own Shop. Ida was thrifty, and as her brother did a great deal towards the support of the house she had been able to save some of the money she had earned in the seven years she had been in business. She was never quite satisfied with being an assistant printer or an assistant anything for that matter, and when her employer decided to sell out his small business and move to a farm in the country Ida at once tried to find a way to buy it from him. She herself only had three hundred and fifty dollars, but that was not enough. Finally she raised enough money to pay her employer a good down payment and the rest she was to pay with interest every month after the third one. Ida's brother gave her some money and the man she worked for at the steel plant invested or lent her some more. Ida did something that few women do in business she ventured, she dared something which was uncertain and she simply had to make it go. She went about herself and solicited business and she knew just where to go. One of her first customers was the steel plant where she had first worked. In two years Ida had her debts paid off and her business had almost doubled. She had two presses and three assistants. She always did the
"DO IT NOW, TODAY" If your vacation this year has not renewed your strength and vigor as you had hoped, do not be discouraged. You are not the only one. The havoc of war is with many of us still. Others have given their systems a real uplift with Hood's
j Sarsaparilla. Peptiron and Hood s
mis, creating an appetite, aiaing uigestion, perfecting assimilation, and stimulating the liver to a normal activity so that the blood and the system receive tho nutrition .that im-
One package of each medicine will robably be all you will need. This is a specialized treatment, and the combination is reasonably sure to leach your case and bring normal health if it is in the power of any medicine to do it. Begin now, today. Adv.
A Creamy Milk Of Double Richness Ever at Your Call
STERILIZED
Suits Dry Cleaned and Pressed
$1.25
SUITS PRESSED, 50c TROUSERS Cleaned and Pressed 50c CARRY AND SAVE PLAN Altering, Repairing and Pressing dona by practical tailors JOE MILLER, Prop. 17'i Main Street. Second Floor.
Postal Card Given Prompt Attention. Landscape Designs a Specialty. Geo. L. VonCarlezon Landscape Architect Gardener, Park and Boulevard Construction Wfe do sodding, grading, grass sowing, rolling, spraying and fertilizing. We plant, trim, or remove any size tree, shrubs, roses, grapevines, etc. Orders taken for trees, shrubs, roses and all kinds of plants, flowers, bulbs, etc. We Make a Special of Taking Care of Private Residences by the Week or Month at Reasonable Prices. Hedges of all kinds Planted and Trimmed 121 North 7th St. Richmond, Ind.
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Van Camp's costs less than bottled milk. It is vastly cheaper, because it saves all waste. Keep small cans and large cans on the pantry shelf. Open what you wish. Thus you have milk or cream for any purpose. Never a shortage, never a waste. You have a sterilized milk the only safe sort for infants or for drinking. You have for your cooking a full-cream milk, instead of the usual skimmed milk. An Extraordinary Milk We have worked 20 years to attain for you the utmost in a milk. It comes from healthy, high-bred cows. It is protected in all scientific ways. Compare it with other milk, bottled or in cans. You will find Van Camp's the milk you want.
Order from your grocer, and today.
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544
The Government Demands Comfort and Economy With Security
When the Federal Reserve Bank, of Chicago, put into commission its "bandit proof" auto truck, fully as formidable in appearance as an armored car, all four wheels were shod with Goodrich De Luxe Truck Tires. De Luxe Tires were chosen for several very definite reasons: (1) They have a higher, thicker 'tread thus give more rubber whijre the wear comes. (2) This higher tread gives more rubber to w ear away thus more mileage thus more service thus more economy. (3) This higher tread gives, greater cushion thus protects axles bearings gears and increases riding comfort. The wisdom of the Government's choice will become apparent io you if you check the tire and gas mileage of De Luxe users with your own.
10,000 Miles Adjustment We Sell and Apply De Luxe Tires
RodefelcTs Garage
96 W. Main Street
Phone 3077
2 1 0 E Ly xe
I
