Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 44, Number 287, 16 September 1919 — Page 5
PAGE FIVE 1
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, TUESDAY, SEPT. 16, 1919.
Household HintsBy Mrs. Morton
MAKE GRAPE JUICE Wise housekeepers can plenty of grape Juice, for use not only as a beverage, but as a flavoring In various tempting desserts. Only clean, sound, well ripened, but not overripe grapes should be used. These may be crushed by a potato masher or some similar Impplement. or the Juice may be pressed out In an ordinary cider mill. Pour Immediately Into a glass or enameled vessel and allow It to stand over night. Drain the Juice from the sediment and run through several thicknesses of clean flannel. Pour into clean bottles, leaving space at the top for liquid to expand when hot. Put bottles on a false bottom in a wash boiler if no commercial pasteurized Is available, fill boiler with water to within an inch or so of the tops of the bottles. Place a thermometer in one of the bottles and heat until the Juice reaches a temperature of 180 degrees, then take the bottles out and seal or cork them immediately. Only new corks
which have been soaked for thirty minutes In warm water at a temperature of about 140 degrees should be used. It is well to take the further precaution of sealing the corks with paraffin or sealing wax to prevent the entrance of mold germs. Grape Juice may also be made by adding one pint of water to every five pounds of grapes. Concords and Niagras make an acceptable product. Crush the grapes, add the water, bring nearly to boiling point and strain. And one-half cup of granulated sugar to every quart of juice. Bring Just to a boil, pour into boiled bottles or cans, place in water bath and boil ten minutes; seal air tight. Unfermented grape Juice properly made and bottled will keep indefinitely if not exposed to the atmosphere or to infection from mold germs. When a bottle is once opened, however, the contents should be used as soon as possible. United States Department of Agriculture.
Heart and Beauty Problems By Mrs. Elizabeth Thompson
Dear Mrs. Thompson: I married for love and not for money, and my folks objected to our marriage. I did not heed their advice, and now I would gladly give all I own if I had never married. Since the babies came my husband has hardly given me a kind word. He seems to have no affection for me but loyes the children. He never wants me to buy any clothinp; and doesn't seem to care whether I get away from home or not. Ho seldom spends an evening at home and when ho is at home he jaws and finds fault with me and uses a great deal of profanity. He has killed all the love I ever had for him by the way he talks and treats Do all men begin to disrespect their wives when children begin to come? I try to be good to him and make my troubles seem greater than I can my troubles see mgreater than 1 can bear. A lady once said to me, "No riKh thing as love alter marriage," and I have found that to be true. Shall I continue to live with him, and hear our Creator's name taken in vain every hour of the day? It is degrading to live with such a person. Can you give a discouraged wife a little advice? CONSTANT READER. There is a law of compensation which cannot be turned aside. You chose unwisely when you married and now you are paying the price. This law works two ways, however, The fact, that you are making the best of your unhappy life and doing all pos
sible to keep your home pleasant, will have its results. The only advice I can give you is to make the best of things as they are and to be thankful for all your blessings. There are many people who are more miserable than you are and you can be thankful that your lot is not as hard as theirs. Learn to be more positive with your husband. Do not count on him to take you places, be self-reliant and go alone or with women friends. You need to get away from home more, of course, and should find a way. When your husband scolds and swears, keep silent until he wears himself out. It is unfortunate that
your children must grow up in such i
an atmosphere, but it will teach them love and respect for that which is good, and they will remember your teaching and will not go the way of their father. For the sake of your children, try not to grow bitter. There is such a thing as love after marriage, and you should firmly believe In it so that your children will build an ideal. Teach them love and respect so that their married life will be happier than yours has been. Do not criticise your husband to the children. If they love him, be thankful there is enough good in him for them to love. They will see the injustice of his treatment to you without you saying anything about it. I believe that your life will become easier when the children are older. Keep your faith and believe that life will be generous in its returns for what you put into it.
ity stated that one per cent of the people of the United States own fifty per cent of the wealth, and that even in prosperous years more than a tenth of the population was upoa the verge of starvation. He considered himself fairly within this hideous classification. And he was thoroughly sick of it He longed to be one of the "one per cent." Yet the smattering of knowledge he had so recently acquired as to the pernicious workings of the "System" made him realize that he not only could never be, but thai he wouldn't want to be unless he could by the magic power of his necessarily ill-gotten gains reform the world. Bernie was emotionally and mentally very much mixed up about things. He felt, rather than reasoned out, the Tightness of his newly espoused Cause, as all new students of it do. He was stupendously enthused, as all new students of it are. He wanted to do more than merely acknowledge allegiance. He wanted to shout it from the housetops, to change human nature at one stroke, to wither the noxious fruits of the present industrial system instantly, to obliterate poverty, slavery, caste, class hatred, child lab or, unemployment and all other corruption at a single blast. He didn't know where to begin, whom to hate, whom not to blame. He only felt that he had found something the possibilities of which to himself and others he did not dream. It remained for Annie, who knew still le68 of it than he, to set him upon the practical path leading upward. (To be continued )
liam Huddleston were a Munci? last
Friday to attend the funcial of Mrs Charles Bullock.
BOY SERIOUSLY KURT WHEN KICKED IN HEAD
Milton, Ind. Mr. and Mrs. Ed TVIanlove of Indianapolis have been visiting Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Manlove Mr. and Mrs.
Howard Stanton and daughter, of Indianapolis, were week-end guests of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Hussey. Miss Emma Gingrich was home from Ander. son over the week-end Miss Mary Sills was home from Muncle to spend Sunday Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Beck and son John, and Mr. and Mrs. Charles King spent the week end with Indianapolis relatives Miss Alice Napier has been spending the week with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. James Napier. Miss Napier has a position in Washington. D. C Mrs. Homer Bertsch, Mrs. Ozro Dailey, Mrs. George Wagnor, Mrs. Walter Highams, Mrs. Ross Doddridge, Mrs. James Murphy, Misses Gussie Miller, Ruth McCormick, Mary Lovell Jones, Marie Harmier, and Esther Borroughs of Jacksonburg, were guests of Mrs. Welbaum Wessel Friday evening Mr. and Mrs. Little and children, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Little, spent Sunday evening at Milton. Ralph'Little sang two beautiful solos at the Christian church. ....Mrs. James Napier and daughters Alice and Pearl, spent the week end at Frankfort, Ind., with Mrs. Walter Napier and family Mr. and Mrs. Willis Leverton and Mr. and Mrs. Wil-
C enter ville, Ind. Miss Norene Means is visiting friends in Connersvllle this week The Means store is in charge of Miss
Hannah Lamott during Miss Mean'6
absence. Charles Stafford, of Henry county, spent Wednesday of last week with James Helms and daughter
Mrs. Flora King visited relatives in j
nanaoipn county last weeK.. . .twenty guests formed a dinner party at the home of Mr. and Mrs. William Conkle Sunday. Those present were M. A. Cook and family, Gus Rodefeld and family, Mrs. Henry Unthank and her daughter, Helen, Mr. and Mrs. Rolland Rosey and family, all of Richmond, Mr. and Mrs. Marion Martin and Mrs. Cora Cook Will Conkle went to Greenville, Ohio, Monday, on. a business trip Miss Ruth Quackenbush and Miss Abble Hassler were entertained at Sunday dinner by Prof, and Mrs. Driver.. .Mr. and Mrs. Cary Clark and daughter, Pauline, and Mrs. Rebecca Clark of Lynn, were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Peele. . .Andrew Dunbar and wife, and Paul O'Neal and family visited relatives at Muncie, Sunday A. D. Allen and wife of Long Beach, Calif, are guests this week of Jesse Ruby and family. Mrs. Allen is Mr. Ruby's sister. Ed Ruby, of Carthage, was also at their home Sunday Dr. Conner and wife of Farmland, were guests Sunday of Dr. Moore and wife.
OXPORD, O- Sept. 16. Albert Cotton, aged 7 years, son of Arthur Cotton, a well known farmer, was seriously Injured yesterday by being kicked on the head by a horse. His condition is critical.
CONVOY APPOINTED PASTOR.
TWO APPOINTED AT OXFORD.
OXFORD, O., Sept. 6 Miss Florence Swisher, of the University of Chicago, has been appointed assistant professor or hingnsn and Bible at Oxford College for Women. Miss Helen Tukey, of Marion, Ind., has beon ap
pointed librarian at the same institution.
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OXFORD, O., Sept. 16. Rev. W. A. Conroy, of Dayton, has been appointed pastor of St. Mary's Catholic church, succeeding Rev. Timothy C. Bailey, transferred to St. Edwards church, Cincinnati.
Her Face Beams
with the "Wash day smile," instead of the Wash Day Grouch, iu sheer joy and delight et the dazzling, snowy white purity of her white goods. Red Cross Ball Blue will chase "wash-day-blues" Succeed where others fail, and bring the smile of triumph to every housewife who realty cares for pure, white, fresh clothes. 5 CENTS. AT ALL GROCERS.
ANNOUNCING the re-opening of my office after a year's absence In the service abroad. DR. A. J. WHALLON
29 So. 10th St.
Phone 2399
aDananKSunanaBaBsaBaannaBBBBf -out or tkT-Vky nwanwasw
A Chance to Live By Zoe Beckley
"Listen, Nance; 1 had a confab with: Arkwright." Bernie was a little excited and was trying to keep his flzting spirits under control as he followed Annie into the kitchen, and back again, and again into the kitchen and back again, while she set the dinner on the table. "You know, he isn't a bad sort of guy if you go at him right." "Guess that's the way with most people," commented Annie encouragingly. "Well, anyhow, I got hold of him after lunch, and we talked. I'd been feeling pretty sore at Arkright," Bernie pursued. "I figured it was rotten for him as manager paying me twelve a week just because I was down. But he was frank. Said it was simply a case of holding his own job, that if he couldn't show he was running his department at as low expense as other firms did, he'd get fired. It isn't his fault; it's the System's fault!" Bernard was still hot in the wake of the System. "He said shipping clerks were thicker than flies, and that only an absolutely indispensable man got big pay. "Now that's just what I want to get at, I says to hini. How can I be that man? He kind of looked at me. Of -ourse no one's actually indispensable he said, although a good many think they are. But I like a fellow to be ambitious. I can always use a man that knows more than other men
about some line of work. Are you willing to knuckle down and get tho Ins and outs of the business?" "You bet I am, I told him and he could see I meant it. What ought I to know to get me promotion and more pay?" "Well, he said, what I need most is a man who knows about freight rates and routings and keeps posted on the changes that are being made all the time now. This war, he said, ought to boost our business to double its regular amount, and maybe more. Everybody'll be buying tobacco for the soldiers, and if this draft law goes through, he says, we'll be working nights and holidays, or I miss my guess. "The next step after you know all about your clerk job, he said, is to learn the outside end of the business the selling end. That's the big thing to put over sales. When you can do that, the way's open to almost any job you want In the company head manager, vice president, director, owner! Those are the fellows that get all the profits, he said. And he's right, Ann. He doesn't know how right he is." Bernie paused for the double purpose of starting his dinner, which was now on the table, and trying to recall what he had read in a book Rafetsky had leaned him about how the wealth of tho world was distributed. He could remember that the author-
I Doivt Have To otry Now! THERE was a time when I worried over my baby, because he was so thin and pale. We were trying to feed him raw milk with water, because I couldn't nurse him but it was too hard for his little stomach to digest.
"Isn't there some form of milk easier for him?" I asked my doctor. "Let's try Nestle's Milk Food," he said. "That is just pure milk, you know, in powder form but much easier to digest because the curds are broken up and more nourishing because just the right amount of sugar and cereal is added." 1 don't have to worry, now I Those dimpled arms and legs that slow, tweet contented
smile those lone, quiet, restful nights and the happy days they tell me my baby is safe at last. If you are worrying about your baby, I hope you will try Nestle's Food. The Nestle Company sint me free a Mother's Book on how to take care of baby, and enough of the Food for twelve feedings. If you fill out and send the coupon below, I know they will be glad to help you as they helped me and as they have been helping mothers all over the world for fifty years.
Nestle's is pure milk in powder form that is already modified and does not require the further addition or" milk. Always pure and sate, always uniform, and free from the dingers of home modification, Nestle's has stood the test ci three generations and hmi tojjy tit Urged $aU of any
tasj yj is tu world.-
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NESTLES
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NO better way could befound to illustrate and emphasize the usefulness of the Standard Oil Company (Indiana), and the broad and varied service it renders, than to take five minutes and imagine a gasless year. Think how our lives instead of being full and complete through association with our fellow men would be circumscribed by the barriers set up by shank's mare. Think how manufacturing would be hampered. How industry generally would be crippled. How crops would go to waste through inability to harvest, and the leaps and bounds that the cost of living would take. Instead of the natural expansion of business . that comes from service and usefulness, the whole structure of business would be hampered through sheer inability to render to society that service which society has been accustomed to demand. The Standard Oil Company (Indiana) is a public servant owned by 4649 stockholders, no one of whom holds as much as 10 percent of the stock. The Standard Oil Company (Indiana) is doing a big job in a big way and has grown great simply by reaping the rewards that come from rendering the service demanded by business and society in a manner satisfactory and beneficial to the world at large. Standard Oil Company (Indiana) 910 S. Michigan Ave.. Chicago, III.
to the Frame oS Lnle Aiter 3 Years9 Service
The sure-fire test of truck tires is the vitality retained by the tread rubber after moderately long service. Examine a Goodrich De Luxe Truck Tire after 20 months of service and without exception you'll find the rubber as live and flexible as the day it was applied to the truck. Service of Goodrich De Luxe Truck Tires on a 3V2-ton unit of the Hartford City Ice Co., Hartford City, Ind., confirms this affirmation. Having run steadily for three years, these tires are still so resilient as to assure at least two more years of service. This vitality, due to the employment of only pure rubber plus masterly compounding, is the secret of De Luxe savings pronounced all through Indiana. Buy De Luxe Tires and you buy the maximum in service.
WE SELL AND APPLY DE LUXE TIRES
Roddeld's Garage
96 W. Main Street
Phone 3077
'(De Luxe!
