Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 44, Number 296, 23 September 1919 — Page 5
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM TUESDAY, SEPT. 23, 1919.
Heart and Beauty Problems By Mrs. Elizabeth Thompson
Dear Mrs. Thompson: I am a young man of twenty-five and am considered good-looking and of good reputation. I em going with a girl of twenty-four end have been going with her for over three years. AVe are to be married this month end I love her with all my heart and fbe has always told mo she loved me. But when I am with her she often speaks of my fallen relatives and asks me if I will ever be like some of them. Of late she is easily made to believe things that are untrue that she hears and she says she doesn't want to have her reputation hurt. She often speaks of her chum who la to be married the same time we are. She says her chum will have fine furniture and she wishes that we could afford as much as her chum. I am a laboring man and will be glad to do the best for her that I can. Do you think ' furnished rooms would be all right to live in for a while, as I have lately been discharged from the army and have not much money paved? Do you think she loves me as she should? WORRIED. I do not like to discourage you, but your situation looks a litis serious. The girl Ought to love you so much that she will forget the reputation of your relatives and take you for what you are. Besides, if she has consented to marry, she should be willing to take what you can give her and not try to compare what she has with what some one else has. Walt a few months before you mar
ry 6o that you will be more sure of the girl's love. If you lose her, try not to grieve. Surely you would rather give her up than have a wife who cared more for what you could give her than for you yourself. Some girls are willing to go Into furnished rooms. I think, however, that you will be happier if you wait until you are able to start out with furniture of your own. It does not pay to marry when one cannot afford it.
Dear Mrs. Thompson: I am a girl of twenty-one, of Jewish faith. I have been keeping company with a young man of twenty-one for over a year. He is a Gentile and my father objects seriously to our going together. He watches me very closely and will not allow the fellow to come and see me. He did not object to his coming to the house until recently. A short time ago he told the fellow that he did not want to see him with me any more. I have been going out with the fellow on the sly. I know he cares for me and I care for him more than anyone else. Should our differences in faith have anything to do with our keeping company? Should a girl suit herself or her father at this age? My mother does not seem to care. N. E. F. Your future is at stake, and I believe you should suit yourself in the matter of marriage. Ido no.t feel competent to advise you in so grave a matter. Do what you believe is right and have faith that the outcome will be for the best.
Household Hints By Mrs. Morton
RECIPES SERVE TWO. Deviled Egg and Lettuce Salad (for two) Fresh eggr. three: lettuce, one small head; dressing, four tablespoons. Boil etfgs until hard (twenty minutes). Remove shells while hot, cut In halves (lengthwise). Remove yolks, mash and mix with following: Butter, one tablespoon; prepared mustard, one teaspoon; mayonnaise, two teaspoons; cream, one tablespoon. Kalt. and pepper to taste. Add more cream and mayonnaise If necessary to make a fluffy paste. Refill the whites of eggs. Cool in ice box. Arrange three halves in star shape on shredded lettuce. Cover with mayonnaise dressing and serve. Tapioca and Pineapple Custard Pineapple, one small can .(home canned); tapioca, three tablespoons; milk, one cup; sugar, one-half cup; eggs, one. Soak tapioca in a little water for boiling add tapioca and cook for ten about ten minutes. When milk i3 minutes. To this add the yolk of the eg?s beaten lightly and sugar. When thick add the juice of pineapple and
allow to cook to the right consistency of custard. Remove from fire. When cooled, fold in the stiffly beaten white of egg and pour over the diced pineapple. Just half the contents of can need be used. Place on ice and serve cold. Pimento Potatoes To mashed potatoes add two tablespoons pimento put through fine sieve; this gives the potatoes a faint taste of pimento and gives it the color of egg yolk. One tablespoon is enough for a serving for two people. A GOOD RECIPE. Preserved Crabapples Wash crabapples. Leave stem on, then prick with a fork two or three times. Take a cup of sugar to every pound of fruit and about one-half cup of water. Boil syrup. When boiling, add fruit and let boil until it jells like other jelly. Crabapples will stay whole. Put into pint jars or glasses. Cover with parowax. Very nice to serve with meats and they look very nice for luncheon.
She Married An Average Man
BY ZOE BECKLEY
A week has passed since I heard the minister say, 'I pronounce you man end wife," felt the warmth of Jim's big hand on my arm, heard the wheezy little organ gasp out are wedding march, had my mother's tears upon my cheek and slipped away from Centerville on the 8:55. I shaU never forget the absurd move I made to correct Jim as he wrote "Mr. and Mrs. James T. Salsberry" in the hotel register at Pocono Falls. I completely forgot for the instant that I wasn't Miss Ann Ferrow. I blushed myself almost into a fever when the clerk laughed and Jim laughed and the porter made believe he did not see the grains of rice that stuck In the folds of our traveling bag. Our bag! I cannot get used to the plural possessive! Yet how I love It. As we go about seeing the sights, attending theatres, taking excursions In these etrange towns, I play a constant game with myself. I call it "fascination." Maybe I'm silly. But I can't help noticing in our travels everywhere how indifferent married couples seem to each other. My game of "fascination" has for its basis the pretense that Jim and I are not married that we're just to see each other for an hour or two or for the afternoon, like the pairs of lovers one encounters everywhere in the summer, Whenever I Bee an obviously married couple I watch when they speak to each other or when they pass some place of interest. Whatever the wife says or does. I improve on it to Jim. I make a point of never doing the commonplace things they do. I try to .think of interesting bits of talk. f .don't let myself lapse into boredness
or long tired silences, although I must say this constant trailing about sightseeing, with Jim almost half the time attending to business matters on the side, isn't as exhilarating as it might be. Even a bride gets weary contemplating her happiness and blessings when she has to wait three hours in a jay town where there is but one decent department store while her husband writes a contract with a redfaced contractor who says "I seen it" and "I done it." However the five days at Lake George were heavenly. There was only one tiny cloud, and probably I imagined even that. Jim got four letters. One from his mother, in Middleport. I waited for Jim to tell me about it what was in it or maybe let me read it myself. But he didn't. I asked him if there was any particular news; If his mother and sister were well, etc., for I knew how he worships his mother. To my amazement Jim folded up the letter, put it In his pocket and said : "Oh, everything's all right, dear. But mother has some business she wants advice about. I may have to leave you here, kiddie, and take a run over to Mlddleport for a day and a night." I felt like cryiDg. But I played my game. I determined not to be the "usual woman." I hid my resentment of his mother's intrusion into our honeymoon under a brave sense of humor. . I told myself that good nature and coquetry will win out where everything else fails. I scorned objections and complaint. And I made myself as pretty at dinner time as my vanity case and trousseau would per-
when you want CRACKERS
Grocers who sell Edgemont Crackers are good men to deal with
mit. And they have rather ample possibilities. I have heard nothing about the trip to mother and Middleport since. But that even for a moment Jim was willing to go bruised my heart. Furthermore, only two of the other three letters be got were business documents. The fourth may have been from his sister. But why doesn't Jim tell me things? That fourth letter was on cream paper, with a tiny, pale green border. (To be continued.) Pershing, Ind. Mrs. J. W. Chase spent Saturday evening In Richmond. Mrs. Rebecca Taylor is ill at her home of heart trouble. Mrs. Mary Bogs spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Henry Will. Bert Dolby has moved his family from Hagerstown to this place. Mr. and Mrs. Barns of this place, will move to Centerville this week. Mr. and Mrs. John Newbold spent Sunday with relatives in Louisville. Mrs. James Laws, and Miss Bessie George spent Saturday in Richmond. Mr. and Mrs. Dr. Sese, of Indianapol
is, spent Thursday with Mrs. O. F. J
Jamieson. Mr. and Mrs. William Rowe, of Greenfield, spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. J. Tout. Mrs. J. W. Sims of Indianapolis, spent the week-end with Mr. and Mrs. O. F. Jamieson. Mr. and Mrs. Archie Wills and family spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Lamot and family. Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Arnuckle, of Indianapolis, spent Sunday with Mrs. Bertha Carpenter, and Mrs. Barbra Snave. Mr. George Neff attended the wedding Wednesday of last week, of his granddaughter, Miss Mable Neff, of Newcastle. He is now spending a few weeks with other relatives.
Mr. end Mrs. James Kellis, formerly' of Modoc, now of Kalamazoo, Mich., i spent Sunday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Gaddis. 1
Mrs. Grace Hunt of Economy, was In Modoc Thursday, visiting friends. Misses Hally Buitowb and Mable Petro have gone to Richmond to work In the piano shop. Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Swain will spend the week-end with Dave Snodgras3 at Winchester. From there they will go to Marlon to spend most of the winter with Mr. and Mrs. Dr. Fite. Miss Garnet Gray gave an all-day picnic at Mills Lake near Farmland, Saturday, In honor of her Sundayschool class. Those present were: Misses Alice Lee, Louise Lenington, Margaret Segraves, Phyllis Mitchell, Blanch Dever, Juanita Thomas, MarJorie Burgess, Ruth and Yeonlca Wiggins, Bessie Heston, Kenneth Thomas, Lee Cramor, Roger Cox, Dallas Krausbaur, William Lucas and John Wright.
Modoc, Ind. Clarence Stock is at home after being in service for quite a while. Mrs. Minnie Connaroe is at Fort Wayne visiting friends and relatives. The canning factory of this place has been rushed with the work for the past few weeks. Russell and Pierre Edwards were calling on friends near Buena Vista Sunday evening. Many U. B. people of this place went to Redkey Sunday to call on Rev. Mr. Beall, who recently left this place. Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Fritz will move to Economy soon. Mr. Fritz will work in the creamery there. The first number of the lecture course will be given at the school building Saturday evening, September 27th. Mrs. Luna Edwards returned homf Tuesday after an extended visit with her son Clair Edwards in Kalkaska. Mich. Mrs. Bell Gaddis and daughter Pauletta Edwards of Kalkaska, Michigan, spent Sunday with Bert Veals, near Economy. Mrs. Sarah Petro returned home Sunday afternoon, after spending a few weeks with her daughter at Middletown, Ohio. Mr. and Mrs. James Petry and daughter, Anna Gauch of West Manchester, Ohio, visited L. W. Ridenour for Sunday dinner.
Ohio News Flashes
CLEVELAND Whisky, brandies and gin amounting to $75,000, have been stolen here since the state prohibition act went into effect, according to police records. Since May 26, 55 places have been robbed of 6,523 quarts of liquor. HAMILTON A community chest
as a continuation of the war chest. J
was pmuucu a. i a mcctiug ecutive committee at a meeting. A campaign will be held annually for charitable and social organizations. DAYTON Col. John JJ. Straat of the Cincinnati Recruiting Office, will present the Croix de Guerre with a silver star to Lieut. Wilbur L. Jenks and Corporal Lawrence Fischer in this city. The crosses were conferred by the French government for heroism when in action. MIDDLETOWN Mrs. Marguerite Jeanne Pease, a French war bride
brought here by her American soldierj husband in May, is homesick to seel her parents and has applied for at
passport to France. LIMA Robbers cracked a eaf at the new Regent Theatre Siaay, and escaned with 81.000 in cash. The
theatre had been open but a week, i
CINCINNATI A total contribution
of $7,213.50 has been raised here by the Chamber of Commerce for the relief of victims of the Corpus Christi (Texas) gulf storm and flood.
CANTON Three armed bandits entered a gasoline-filling station, and while one held up the man in charge, the others rifled the cash drawer, obtaining $70.
t 1 v 1
Jly Baby Game WHEN they put that warm, fragrant little bundle into my arms and told me he was perfect, I cried. I was so happy. Of course, I was going to nurse
him. And so I did, for two months.
But he didn't gain weight as fast as he should.
Then the doctor told me not to worry, and that often mother couldn't nurse their babies. "The nearest thing to mother's milk I know of," he said, "is Nestle's Milk Food. "Of course, he has to have milk in some form and Nestle's is pure milk only made easier to digest because the tough curdsarebroken up. To that they add just the right amount of sugar and cereal, so you only add water to Nestle's, boil it, and your baby has all the nourishment he needs in the safest form."
Then, when he bee an to gain
weight when the dimples began to show on his knees and his plump little elbows I knew what happiness really was! The Nestle Company sent 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 it pure milk in powder form that is already modified and does not require the further addition of milk. Always pure and safe, always uniform, and free from the dangers of home modification, Nettle's his stood the test of three generations and Kai
today tit largtit mil of any baby Joed in tie world.
FREE! Enough Nestle's for 12 feedings. S-snd the coupon!
NESTLE'S
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