Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 44, Number 294, 27 September 1919 — Page 5

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. SATURDAY, SEPT. 27, 1919.

PAGE FIVE

Heart and Beauty Problems By Mrs. Elizabeth Thompson

Dear Mrs. Thompson: I am sixteen years old and am worried about the way my father and brothers are treatins me. They 'won't let me have any boy or girl friends. When they come they insult them and then they scold me for not having any friends. My mother is not so bad. but she scolds me. I am still going to school and work on Saturdays. Where I work they want me to quit school and work all the time. My coifsin lived with us and my parents wouldn't let her have any friends when she was twenty, and she left home Would you advise me to quit scoolh and go to mv aunt's and pay board? SWEET SIXTEEN. , Get more education even if you have to endure a great deal of suffering at home. If you were to quit school and go to work, you would earn so little after paying your board you would have nothing left to spend. If you educate yourself, in a few years you will be ready for a much better position and make considerably more money. You are just a little girl and for two

or three years longer ought to be willing to work and study for the sake of your future. Dear Mrs. Thompson: We are two girls twelve and fifteen years of age. (1) We have never gone with fellows, but now two fellows have asked to come to see us. How should we actt when our parents are around? (2) What shall we say when we ask them to come to see us? (3) If they do not take us anywhere bow should we entertain them? (4) How late should we stay out with them? ROSEBUDS. (1) Follow your impulse and act the way which seems most natural at the time. I cannot map out your conduct. When you are alone you should do nothing which you would hesitate to have your parents see. (2) Let the young men ask to come to see you, instead of asking them to come. (3) Read and talk, (4) You are too young to go out nights with young men.

old friend who was very kind to ma abroad." "Never heard you speak of him," commented Jim, in that voice which means 'so of course there's a romantic mystery somewhere." The telephone rang just three and a long business conversation ensued between Jim and some man. Jim went out after dinner and nothing more was said about the letter. The incident is not closed, however. I feel it. (To be continued)

Indiana News Brevities

TERRE HAUTE A company headed by Mayor Benjamin Bosse of Evansville. took over the Deming Hotel, one of the state's finest hostelries. LAFAYETTE William B. King, 71 years old, one of the city's best known business men, was found dead in his room at the LaSalle hotel in Chicago.

She Married An Average Man

BY ZOE BECKLEY

OWENSVIL.LE Robbers entered the vault of the Owensville Banking company and escaped with approximately $15,000 in government bonds. The robbers have not been apprehended.

Household Hints By Mrs. Morton

An odd thing happened today. I had a letter from England, from Eric Sands. It was written from "Essex training camp," which means Eric is on his way to the war. It had been forwarded by Daddy and carefully readdressed with my new name.

It stirred a swarm of memories. 1 suppose the glamour of a girl's first trip to Europe never dies out of her heart. There is always an adventure or two in it; always a little romance. "I sit here by the light of a campfire, thinking," he wrote. "Thinking of the beauty of life and love and the hideous, unnecessary horror of death on the battlefield. "Do you think me a coward; I am not. But I am going to the front with every nerve In my body, every emotion in my soul, pet full against this hid'.eous violence." It shook me dreadfully to read that. And later on in the letter where he wrote: "It has been six years since I saw you. You were such a splendid, eager girl, so earnest, so capable, so independent. An American girl to the core, and how 1 admired you for it! 1 wonder what life has done to you and for you?'' I read it with wet eyes and thumping heart. There was more in the same strain, generalities for the most part. Certainly no attempt at love making. Merely the tender, reminiscent words of a man on the edge of a solemnly great adventure. Jim came home a little earlier than usual, letting himself quietly In with his latchkey. I jumped at the sound of his greeting. "Why what's the matter with little wifplets!" he cried. "Mooning in the twilight by the fire?"

Taken unawares, any one will start and "come back" with an obvious jerk to present surroundings. I jammed the letter under the sofa pillows, merely so I could rise with freehands to Jim's

hug and kiss. I bustled, getting dinner, and was totally unprepared for Jim's remark, half way through the meal: "I hardly consider it in good taste, Ann , for you to receive love letters from other men now." "Why, my dearest boy, I haven't been." I answered, smiling, though a swift chill crept crept around my heart. "Oh. don't make the sterotyped denial," he answered, quietly. "An intelligent woman and a broad-minded man can discuss these things without excitement and without recourse to untruths." "Jim! You must not say things like that. It is not a love letter and I am being truthful. I have not seen Eric Sands since I made a vaca tion trip to Europe six years ago. He knows nothing of my marriage. He is probably married himself. At all events, he is entitled to your respect. He has written nothing I would not gladly show you." "You did not show it to me ," answered Jim, still in that frigidly restrained tone. "I didn't have time to. You came in so suddenly, and I didn't want you to misunderstand." " Very thoughtful of you, my dear. Finding it by accident, I read the opening lines before I realized what it was." "Jim, please dont take that tone," I begged. "Eric Sands is simply an

ELWOOD Defective electric wiring Is believed to have caused the fire of the Grand Theatre here, entailing a loss estimated at $75,000.

! NORTH MANCHESTER Burl Guyj er, of this city, twice reported killed

wnne Berving in me army overseas, has returned to his home. A gold star medal was to have been presented to his parents at the homecoming day

i in Wabash, Oct. 2.

Funeral Must Be Right;

He s Going to Attend It CRAWFORDS VILLE, Ind., Sept. 27. Just to know that the thing is prop erly done, James H. Houser, an aged farmer, living west of this city, is to conduct his own funeral services. Houser has fixed Sunday afternoon as the date for the event and has picked Union Central church, near his home, as the place. He has exercised the further unusual privilege of selecting his own minister and has personally attended to all the other little details of making the service a success." Plans were made by Houser for the funeral months ago. but only recently he chose the date. He has expressed a wish that no funeral services be held at the time of his death.

TESTED RECIPES Veal Souffle Make a white sauce of two and one-half tablespoons of butter, two and one-half tables'poons of flour, one teaspoon of salt, one cup of milk.

Cook until it thickens. Then re-1

move from fire and add three- quarters cup of chopped veal (cooked), one teaspoon of chopped parsley, yolks of two eggs, well beaten. Fold in whites of two eggs beaten stiff. Pour into pudding dish; set dish in pan of hot water and bake about forty-five minutes in slo woven. Serve with a thin white or tomato sauce. Souffles make an especially attractive way of using up left over meats. Stuffed Pepper Salad Wash a green pepper and remove the seeds from the inside. Mix one package of cream cheese and the meats from four English Walnuts which have been

finely chopped. Place the mixture inside of the peper. Cut pepper in slices about one-forth inch thick and arrange on lettuce leaves on individual salad plates. Serve with French dressing. Oatmeal Cookies One and onefourth cup brown sugar, one cup short

ening, two eggs (beaten), one cup of sour milk, two cups flour, two cups oatmeal, one-half teaspoon salt, three teaspoons cinnamon, two teaspoons cloves, two teaspoons allspice, one cup seedless raisins, one-quarter cup nut meats (chopped). Cream sugar and shortening, add eggs weir beaten, alternate milk with flour into which has been sifted soda, baking powder, salt and spices, stir in oat meal, raisins and nuts; drop from spoon onto buttered sheet and bake in moderate oven. The above recipe will make about seventy cookies. They may be kept for some time and are very handy ft serve for breakfast, dinner or with custards.

DISCOVERIES. Packing Lemon Pie Instead of making a large lemon pie and then attempting to cut it and pack it in the lunch box, use cup cake tins, filling them with the dough and after baking fill each cup cake holder with the filling and then the frosting.. This not only makes a convenient way of packing lemon pie but also makes a dainty dessert for the guest, thus saving the trouble of cutting the pies for each individual.

STOLEN $10,000 FOUND

QUEBEC. Sept. 27. All but $10,000 of the $71,000 in silver and currency stolen by armed bandits from a mail car of the Pacific Limited express last week has been recovered, the police announced today. The money was found in Quebec city, but the police refused to discuss the recovery in detail.

Many Uses of Electric Current To Be Shown at Chicago Electrical Show (By Associated Press) CHICAGO, Sept. 27. New ways in which electricity can help the housewife will be shown at the Electric Trades Exposition at the Coliseum, Oct. 11-25. The displays will include cOoklng apparatus of all kinds, electric stoves, electric heating equipment, vacuum cleaners, refrigerating machinery, motors for sewing machines, electrically operated machines for washing and ironing, and electric fans for cooling and ventilating. Other exhibits will illustrate the development of things electrical during the war. There will be high powered search lights, wireless telephones, and wireless and self-printing telegraph apparatus. An electrical furnace such as is used for making the high grade steel required for long range cannon will be on display and incandescent lights will be manufactured before the eyes of visitors.

Navy Plans Flight to Phillipine Islands WASHINGTON. Sept. 27. Tentative plans now under consideration at the Navy Department call for a seaplane flight from San Diega, Cal.. to

the Philippine Islands this winter or in the early spring. Stops will be made at Hawaii. Wake Island and Guam under present plans. The total distance to be covered in the flight will be more than 7,000 miles or twice the distance covered by the NC-4 in flying across the Atlantic. The longest leg from San Diego to Hawaii will be more than 2,000 miles.

Viscount Gray Arrives as English Ambassador

VrW VHDIT CAnT 7 Art-ietnii

here late Friday aboard the steamship Mauretania to assume his new pos' as British ambassador to the' United States, Viscount Edward Grey, wearing black glasses, deplored his poor eyesight, which compelled him to withdraw for three years from public life and which, be said, would make his mission in this country "comparatively short." Greeted by a group of British officers from the embassy in Washington, headed by Robert S. Lindsay, Viscount Grey expressed delight at the attention shown him by newspaper men and photographers. He will leave at once for Washington. The ambassador asserted that he had not come to put forward any new porposals for treaties and alliances, but that his object In accepting the post was to promote the existing good will between America and Britain and as far as he had the strength or the

opportunity.

Senator McCnmber occupies a commanding position in the senate at ihk time as he is the only Republican, member of the foreign relations committee who refused to sign the Ixxlgw majority report and is in close tooch. with all the various senatorial groups of both parties.

Treaty Will Pass, Says Sen. McC amber WASHINGTON. Sept. 27 Senator McCumber, Republican, of North Dakota, member of the senate foreign relations committee, believes that the peace treaty will be ratified at an early date without amendments or reservations that will lequire renegotiation with the other signatures.

Washington city is to have a woman's real estate exchange.

FLIES 164 MILES AN HOUR

PARIS. Sept. 27. Aviator Sadi Le cointe broke the French speed record yesterday, flying at the rate of 265 kilometers (about 164 li) an hour.

The Chamber of Commerce of Brussels, urged that harbor works contemplated in 1914 should now be constructed.

TfhOISON OAK

rWash with weak solution of blue stone or lime water, dry thoroughly, follow with light application of VICRS VAP0R1

YOUR BODYGUARD -30. 60.

FOR MEN WHO WORK HARD Factory workers, railroad men, farmers, miners, mill employes and all men who work at hard, straining physical labor are more or less subject to kidney trouble. Nature gives warning signals by frequent lameness, stiff joints, sore muscles, backache and rheumatic pains. J. G. Wolf, Green Bay. Wis., writes: "Foley Kidney Pills relieved me of a severe backache that had bothered me for several months. A few bottles fixed me up In cood

; shape." For sale by A. G. Luken & ' Co. Adv.

The Camera Shop 512 Main St. Finishing, Kodaks, Supplies

Capudine

Five women are Included in

municipal council of Amsterdam.

NO. V

The Army of Constipation Is Growing Smaller Every Day CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS are responsible. Not jf onlv relieve consripa- "fc

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QUICK RELIErV FT? jlj NO ACETANIW&E VTSrH NO DOPE NO BOOZE IT'S RELIABLE FOR HEADACHE

Postal Card Given Prompt Attention. Landscape Designs a Specialty. Geo. L. VonCarlezon Landscape Architect Gardener, Park and Boulevard Construction We do sodding, grading, grass sowing, rolling, spraying and fertilizing. We

plant, trim, or remove any size tree, i shrubs, roses, grapevines, etc. Orders J

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.

tion. but correct biliousness, sick headache, indigestion, sal- A

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of regular habits t

vegetable. Small Pin Saudi Dote Snail Prfes DR. CARTER'S IRON PILLS, Nature's great nerve and blood tonic bit Anemia, RbemnatUm, Nerroaincfis, Sleeplessness and Fesaals Weakness. OcmIss ! Mar i r

Go to the Eaton Fair via Airplane Our planes will go to the fair at Eaton. Ohio, each morning and will return in the evening. Make reservations now for these trips. Chenoweth Aviation Co. Phone 1925 or 3790

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Next Week A Week of Giviii MONDAY, SEPT. 29th TO SATURDAY, OCT. 4th.

You Had No Home But a Waon

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And suppo? vour wife and children were without food or clothing, were ill and helpless. How would you feel? There are thousands of Jewish families in Europe, whose only home i? ut open to the snows and rains. They must face the wintry blasts without hope of medical aid, without heat, without shelter, yes, without food, unless the people of Air y them. You would not let anyone near at hand suffer such tortures. Six Million Human Beings are Suffering the Tortures of Disease, Hunger and Death in the devastated countries of Poland, Galicia, Rumania, Lithuania and Palestine. The pitiful plight of these poor unfortunates is no fault of theirs they are the innocent victims of circumstance a harmless, industrious, and as a rule frugal race of people who have been deprived of all means of support and are now dying by the thousands for want of food and shelter. Americans red-blooded, charitable, humanitarian Americans of every religion and creed are asked to join with their Jewish brethren in saving these human lives and remedying the horrible conditions that now exist.

3em Your Heart amd Your Poeketbook

Give as much money as you can possibly afford. Remember the most beautiful thing in life is charity and money is only good for the happiness it buys. What better use could you put your funds to than saving lives, feeding the hungry, clothing the naked and freezing peoples who have suffered the hardships and brutalities of war? Be ready for the solicitor

when he comes around to see you next week open your heart and your poeketbook.

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wish Relief Campai

" Life for Those in the Shadow of Death '

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Wayne County Committee: SAMUEL FRED, Chairman. HENRY GOLDFINGER, Vice Chairman. CHAS. W. JORDAN, Treas. L. A.' HANDLEY, Secretary.

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