Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 44, Number 299, 30 September 1919 — Page 5
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, TUESDAY, SEPT. 30, 1919.
PAGE FIVE
Household Hints By Mrs. Morton
Webster, Ind.
NEW SUGARLESS SYRUP. No sugar Is required to make a delicious Byrup from apple Juice for use on hot cakes this winter, or for beverages next summer, or to sweeten cookies or deserts. Add five ounces of powdered calcium carbonate to seven gallons of apple Juice or sweet cider. Calcium carbonate is the chemical name of powdered chalk and can be obtained at drug
stores. Boll the mixture in a kettle or vat vigorously for five minutes. Pour the liquid into vessels, preferrably Jars pitcher. Allow It to stand six or eight hours or until perfectly clear. Pour the clear liquid into a clean 1. reserving kettle. Add to this liquid one teaspoon of calcium carbonate; 6tor thoroughly. Boll rapidly (220 degrees F.) until the bulk Is reduced oneseventh of the original volume, or about one gallon to each seven of the quantity first used. The syrup should
ihen have, when tested in cold water, the consistency of maple syrup. Pour into Jars or pitchers and cool it very slowly. Pour the syrup Into fruit Jars, cans, Jugs or kettles. Boll in water bath ten Dilnutes; in a steam-pressure cooker with five pounds, eight minutes. Remove containers and tighten covers or corks. Invert to cool and test Joints. Store for winter use. Unites
Department of Agriculture. REQUESTED RECIPES. Nut and Eflfl Salad Three hard boiled eggs, one and one-half cups chopped celery or cabbage, one-half
cup chopped nuts. Remove yolks or two eggs and chop fine. Season with salt and pepper. Arrange a layer of egg, sprinkle with salad dressing. Add nuts and celery, mixed, alternately In this way until all are used. Rub the reserved yolks through a sieve, Bprlnkle on top. Circle all with dressing, gflarnish with parsley.
Ernest Stotten attended a wedding in Richmond Saturday evening. Delbert Jay was a Richmond visitor Sunday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Will Mull and son of Olive Hill, visited Sam Miller and wife Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Husson of Greensfork, visited Mrs. Lova Yundt Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Clark Meyers and Mr. and Mrs. John Meyers of Hagorstown visited Mr. and Mrs. John Milburn, of
Morrlstown, Ind., Sunday. Mrs. Jennie Jesup and June Jarrett and Noel Culbertson of Economy, are visiting Mr. and Mrs. Cleo Culbertson and family. Those chopping in Richmond Saturday were Mr. and Mrs. Horace Hunt. Mr. and Mrs. Moody Iamb, Mrs. C. E. Baldwin, F. D. Jay, Mr. and Mrs. Cleo Culbertson and family and Norman Beeson. Ministers from a distance who at
tended the conference which was held
at the Methodist church the past past week were Rev. and Mrs. Louis Ulmerof Chester, Rev. Fisher of Economy, Rev and Mrs. Conner of Centervllle, Rev. Gates of Richmond and Rev. Hogan of Cambridge City, who gave a very able address at the night session Thursday evening.
STRIKERS BLOCK RAILS
LONDON, Sept. 30. Two attempts to wreck trains running between London and Brighton by placing boulders on the tracks were reported today. Military forces are now guarding the line. Strikers in Scotland have
blockaded two trains.
Illegal to Teach in German, Wines Warns INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., Sept. 30. State Hines has received a report from Adams County charging that parochial schools maintained by the German Lutheran Church are giving instructions in the German language In defiance of the anti-German language act. Hines has called their attention to the law and advised them it is wholly illegal to use the schools or school organiiations to promote education in the German language.
She Married An Average Man
BY ZOE BECKLEY
I thought it was mostly In comic paper that an Wigry husband Jams on his hat and goes out to the club. If any one had told me that after a month of marriage this very thing would happen to us, I would have laughed the suggestion to scorn. After Jim went out last night I sat before the fire in our little sweet home and tried to think out the situation sensibly. I wonder if every woman is a little disappointed with marriage. I wonder If every husband Jumps to absurd conclusions regarding his wife's premarital love affairs! And if so, what is a woman to do? Shall she take the high-handed course
remain proudly reticent and allow
m? Or humble her dignity and beg for understanding of something so simple and obvious? I say "simple and obvious" because
II do not believe any woman, save per-1
'Tiaps the convent-bred girl, or the daughter of fanatically religious parients, goes to her marriage innocent of all romantic experience .. Like every normal girl, I have had 'transient loves. I have been in and out of love half a dozen times. And !l enn Rider that fact makes me all the
' mnro nnrthv on1 faithful a wife.
A girl who marries without normal experience of men, does so largely it nf a hiizA and ouite natural cur
iosity. Woe be to such a woman whose longing for adventure comes after her marriage. The wife who truly appreciates her home and husband is, like myself, the girl who has had a little fun out of her girlhood her little "fling" before 4 nn lata
If the gayety, the adventure, the - glamour of living come before and not after marriage, there would be fewer wretched marriages. This I know. I was thinking over all these things and more, when Jim came back from
the club. It must have been nearly
- miflnignt. He came In softly, not at first see
ing me m tne nair-aarn room. A6 ne started to go upstairs, I called out to him. "Why " He paused In surprise.
"You still up?"
"Yes, Jimsie," I smiled. "Come sit here with me by the fire. It's love'.y." Jim looked greatly surprised almost embarrassed, I Bhould say. He took off his hat and overcoat in a sort of awkward silence. Then came and knelt beside me on the hearth-rug, taking my hands. "You aren't aren't mad at me, Kiddie?" he said in his dearest tones. "Why, of course not, Jim." "I was disagreeable at dinner." "Well if you were, -perhaps it was natural under the circumstances; you couldn't be expected to understand." I said this as if I really meant it. There was a pause. "It's wonderful," said Jim at last, "to come back and find you sweet and friendly, dear." I said nothing. Jim drew a long breath and swept a circling glance about the room. "You know," said he after a moment, "I believe the woman who makes a real home for a man, does the greatest thing a woman is capable of doing." He kissed me. I felt wondrously happy. But somewhere deep in my heart, vague but insistent, was the feeling that I was, in a way, Jim's mother not merely his wife though Jim is twenty-eight and I am only twenty-three. I wonder if other women have that odd feeling of maternalness toward their husbands! (To be continued.)
Their baby boy, thtir prlda nd Joy, His Daddy' heart has won, As baby's fair, with (olden hair, Thty call him Golden "Son."
vNii '1' 'o ' '
Make The Laundress Happy
Camden, 0.
Wilbur Lamm has gone to Georgia Mo visit his son, Chester.
Camden friends Sunday afternoon. Pranlr TTllrenhorrv nnrl wlffi we.rft
iEaton visitors Saturday.
Darold Van Shiver who was operated on for appendicitis a short time
juro, is able to be out again.
Miss Susie Sanger has returned from . pleasant visit with her parents in
Mr. and Mrs. Roscoff of Dayton ' iwere Sunday guests of Mrs. Roscoff'3 (father, Gale Cox. Alfred Haisley and wife of near Fountain City are visitiDg Ed Bonner
and family. Rev. Bailey of the United Presby
terian church at Fairhaven has left for Moline, 111. Ralph Duvall, wife and baby of Dayfton are visiting Mrs. Duvall's parents, 5Mr. and Mrs. Robert Duvall. The Camden schools will be closed Thursday and Friday so that all may
. go and enjoy the exhibits.
RIDE in your ! own 4avn -
lone should prompt you to trade -with y ow local grocers. But there are other reasons for buying coffee at home. To be good, coffee mustes fresh. Golden Sun is sold fresh by grocers. The "Wool son Spice Co. Ttkledo, Ohio
You Can't keep the kiddies away from them they taste so good.
Boys and girls love them. Grown-ups enjoy them. The purity, delicacy and high nutritive value of Edgemonts make them a feast in themselves.
GROCERS WHO SELL EDGEMONT CRACKERS ARE GOOD MEN TO DEAL WITH
by making it possible for her to turn out beautiful, snowy white, clothes like new. Red Cross Ball Blue will enable the laundress to produce fine, fresh-looking pure white clothes instead of the greenish yellow usually obtained. RED CROSS BALL BLUE always pleases. 5 cents. At all up-to-date grocers.
church had a market on F. G. Shuey's I Tk T n4nt,' A I A T" 1 1
"Saturday morning. They cleared little more than $lfi. Mrs. Eva Wall is in Hamilton with her daughter. Mrs. Glen Jefferson. Mr. Jefferson Is Improving nicely from an ;- operation performed not long ago. John Gressle and wife of Hamilton pent Saturday night and Sunday with
JMrs. Olivia Brown and Miss Lina Harris. Dr. and Mrs. Graft of Trenton and ' Mrs. Frank Jones of Mlddletown wero " entertained by Mr. and Mrs. Stokes this week. Miss Clara Ramsey and father of Lima are here preparatory to having a sale of household goods and removing to Lima where Miss Clara is .teaching. Ross Pattison who has been over- - seas the past two years is home. He "was one of thf first boys to go from this community and the last to come home.
SOUTH BEND VOTES $2,000 TO WELCOME SERGT. ARCH
- SOUTH BEND, Ind., Sept. 30. The county commissioners today made an appropriation of $2,000 to cover the ex--pense of the reception to be given this week for Sergt. Alex Arch, the South ; Bend gunner who fired the first Amer- , Jean shot in the world war. The ; amount will also cover the expense of ; medals for all St. Joseph County soldiers who served in the war.
AUTO OWNERS If you intend buying a Winter Top for your car, place your order at once for early delivery, as the factories are rushed. ( W. A. PARKE 17 S. Tenth St. Phone 1632 Agents for Detroit Weath-er-Proof Tops, also Auto Trimmings and Repairs of all kinds.
V YOUR, ATTENTION, PLEASE If your bowels need a wholesome jphysic that thoroughly cleanses, sweetens the stomach and benefits ."the liver, take a Foley Cathartic Tablet tonight and you will feel better in ..fthe morning. It is a quick and safe Vom or! V frtr c t n V KAan,KA Km..........
'floating, sour stomach, gas, bad ?Treath. indigestion, constipation or other condition caused by clogged or irregular bcwels. Foley Cathartic Tablets cause no griping or nausea. For ale by A. G. Luken & Co. Adv.
Brown's Restaurant
19 So. 6th St.
Phone 2610
Quick service at all hours MEALS The finest In city good home cooking by people who know how LUNCH And short orders. Best of service Rates Reasonable Give us a trial MODERN ROOMING HOUSE We have seven of the finest furnished rooms all strictly first class and modern. Rented by week or night. ELLIS BROWN, Mgr.
Woman's Hair Not Her Crown If there's any one detail of her apparel a woman must seek perfection in, must hunt for endlessly, it's her hats. Only by keeping everlastingly after them can she catch up with that full faith in her appearance that puts her at her best. She must have hats that are becoming. She must have hats that are striking. And the hunt is endless. For the choice of every hat is beset with difficulties troubling her to no such extent in choosing other details of her wardrobe. The smart Parisenne than whom no woman living knows more about the science of dress-effects confesses this difficulty. She selects her hat first, then the rest of her outfit to match. The little piece of millinery a woman wears on the top of her head either makes or destroys the effect of all the rest of her garb. She may economize on some things she may skimp on others; but her hat that's her crown! By her hats is she known. By her hats, amons; all men and all women, does she take rank. By her hats does she herald h .-rself dowd, nondescript, or woman of fashion. Women settle into one or another of the-e three distinct classes according to the attention they devote to the selection of their hats. It's a confessing age or base laziness, if a woman doesn't care what she wears on her head. She might wisely look as well as feel superior. She has th ? determining of her own class for herself. Her rank doesn't depend upon beauty alone. The modish woman and most women ars modish realizes the importance of hats. She knows that the right hat is the most difficult thing in the world to capture. She keeps everlastingly after it. Smart women demand hats that will crown them with some distinction. They not only crave but find spirited-looking picture hats and roguish, fetching little turbans that have that last touch of style which, whatever their looks rank them among fashionable women. And they save valuable time in the. hunt when they
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That's what Kiizelman Brothers, of Monde, say about the Goodrich De Luxe Truck Tires on their 2-ton truck after two years of service. And if you were to inspect the tires, you, too, would agree with Kitzelman Brothers. No deep tread-cuts the cushion seemingly as big as the day the tires were applied the Goodrich branding sharp and distinct. Inasmuch as Kitzelman Brothers engage in general hauling, the truck constantly carries capacity loads and meets roads of all sorts and description. Such a splendid showing proves emphatically the enormous durability and rubber quality built into these tires. In days like these, when costs are a vital question, it would pay you well to have your truck shod with tires of such pronounced serviceability
10,000 MILES ADJUSTMENT We Sell and Apply De Luxe Tires
-Rodefelds Garage
96 W. Main Street
Phone 3077
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