Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 44, Number 304, 6 October 1919 — Page 5

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. MONDAY, OCT. 6, 1919.

PAGE FIVE

Household HintsBy Mrs. Morton

TESTED RECIPES ..Mint Golatin.-Shread the leaves of a bunch of mint and place In a saucepan. Add one-half cup of water and cook slowly for ten minutes. Now drain and add One-half cup of sugar, three-quar-tere cup of vinegar. Stir to thoroughly dissolve and then place one tablespoon of gelatin to Boak ten minutes and then add the hot mint preparation. Strain and add two drops of green vegetable coloring Into it and then pour into a pan to mold. Cut Into blocks and serve with the meal course. Pea Roast-(a meat substitute)-One cup peas, 3-4 cup breadcrumbs, 3-4 cup milk ,1-4 cup nut meats, 1 tablespoons ugar, 1 egg, pinch of salt. Boil and mash peas, add bread crumbs, well beaten egg, chopped nuts, sugar, butter, salt and milk; mix well. Put into a buttered baking dish, bake thirty minutes and serve with a white sause. Cabbage Salad-Two cups cabbage (white or read), crisp and firm, cut into shreds with a cabbage cutter, wash and drain, add mayonnaise dressing, chopped onion and cucumber (one small onion, one small cucum

Heart and Beauty Problems By Mrs. Elizabeth Thompson

Dear Mrs. Thompson: I have been going with a young man for about six months. One evening he told me he loved me and asked me to quit going with the other boys. I told him I was too young to be engaged and he said he would wait a while. Later he started going with another girl. Then he talked of going on a trip with several boys and I tried to persuade him not to go. He told me he wasn't going and made a date with me for the next night. I waited and he didn't come. The next day I heard he had gone and yesterday I received a letter from him and today a card. Do you think he really loves me? Did he do right in leaving with thi boys when I didn't want him to? Can you please tell me how I can make him want to come back, for 1 feel as though I cannot live without him. PEERLESS. It is impossible to say whether or not the young man loves you. Write him wholesome, friendly letters, not mentioning love or asking him to come back. He will come without .1 doubt. Try not to think of love because you are making yourself miserable. I think it was all right for him to go away with the boys since you are not engaged and have no claims on She Married An

BY ZOE BECKLEY

We had for dinner tonight the things Jim likes best. Then, with the fire snapping on the hearth and the lamp turned low, I tackled my task. "Jim, dear," I began, turning my voice to cheery casualness, "New York is an expensive place to live, isn't it?" "Oh-h, I don't know. It all depends," drawled Jim. "Well, of course, you old Bromide! But Jirnmie. just what is our income here in Omerville?" Jim looked qv zically down at me as I sat bunched aeainst his knee on i tVio ticr-irfVt ?ticr 'l'liv u h o ( in CQm

Thunder-- ant some monov. pussycat? ,m,!.must not hp, Pronged IndefiniteWhat's on its mind, anyhow- , A '"lr llas )d. 'Love is

IT irritates me fearfully to be called l'Urviil' wiit-n l ill it'trllllft pri iuu?. ' "Tell me, Jinitnie: don't tease me.' I persisted. "I know exactly what it rests to run the house. And we pay $10 a month rent. But I want, to krow how much all to Id we have to live I upon. Have we three thousand? Four! thousand?" j "My dearest little girl," said Jim in , that, politely firm tone one vim's to a rem is it of yours- 1 don't want to ! weii-intontionea meauier. wnat con i bother your pretty head over that. Do you want more money to run the house on?" "No." I answered firmly. (My task was harder than I expected.) "What I want, Jim, is to know our income and whether you earn it in the form of salary or commissions or both "Then 1 want a a regular allow ance rovcring household expenses ami I personal needs. No, no; wait, a tnin-' ute. Let me fini.sh! I know what j you're going to say, dear that 1 hav- j accounts at the shops and that all vou i have is mine. And I know it. You're I a generous, darling of a man. "But I eould do so much better for us both if I had something to count on each week, no matter how little. "I want to he an efficient wife, Jimsie; not a mere playmate who is lossel a share of the sweetmeats with out knowing how much is in the paper bag! Besides. 1 don't like to ask. Aud 1 always have to ask. It it humiliates me." Jim rose and began to pace the floor. I knew I had vexed him. "I'm extremely sorrv to humiliate you," he i eaid stiffly. "I have tried " "Oh. cut if. Jim," I ruthlessly interrupted "I'm not a child, to be petted and humored and scolded. I am not complaining, either. I am trying to bo a partner-a business partner as well as a love partner. "You spoke of a possible "hooking up' with Mr. Bclton and going to New York to live. 1 want you to take me Officials Believe Storm Forced Balloonists Down (Py Associated Treys) ST. LOUIS. Oct. 6. For more than two days since ten entrances in the national championship balloon race took the air here no word has been received regarding three of the craft and it was believed today that the high wind and storm encountered by some of the racers over Canada, had driven the three missing pilots to landings in unsettled parts of the dominion. The Goodrich II, which so far leads in distance over the six other balloons, whose pilots have reported, encountered a severe storm, lending credence to the belief that the three miss ing contestants may have been driven Into sparsely settled sections where communication with the outside world may be a matter of several days.

ber) mix well; serve cold. ..Makes ice cream better-When making ice cream add one cup of softened grape-nuts (breakfast food) for every gallon. It is delicious; and also add some of 6berbet and In cooking pearl tapioca add two or three tablespoons of softened grape-nuts for a novel and pleasant flavor. ..Egg Salad-Separate yolks and whites of 4 hard boiled eggs. Chop whites finely marinate with French dressing. COOK FOOD PROPERLY Cooking can often make or mar the nutritive value of food. Aside from the stimulous given to the digestion by the delicious odor and appearance of food "done to a turn" there are scientific principles which we must know in order to get our money's worth from products that get higher in price every day. Foods which contain portein (tis sue-building material) like meat, fish eggs, etc., become tough and indigestible if cooked long at a high temperature. To prevent this give guch foods a high temperature for not longer than ten minutes and then re-

1 duce the heat. him. The trip will be a fine thing for him and you should be glad that he had such an opportunity. Dear Mrs. Thompson: I am a girl of eighteen and have a girl friend of the same age who is very dear to me. The boy she goes with is a friend of mine also. Is it all right for me to go with him if I care to when he ask mcj Shrould she object? I do not want to lose her friendship. ANXIOUS. If you go with the boy, you will probably lose your girl friend's friendship. Be true to your girl friend and wait until some boy likes you especially. Dear Mrs. Thompson: I am sweet sixteen. I attended a dance with my boy friend several nights ago and when he brought me home he kissed me. A few days later he asked me to become his wife. I have said nothing to my mother. Do you think I had better? Am I too young to get married? I love this boy with all my heart. GENEVIVE. You will never regret it if you tell your mother what you have told me Her advice will help you without a doubt. I think you are too young to get married. Average Man into your confidence, Jimmie. I earned my living before we were married and I can be trusted with a knowledge of your affairs. Come, dear, tell me. I don't ask from curiosity." "I can't imagine what's come over you, Ann. You never talked this way before we were married." "No. I wish I had. But I loved you so much I couldn't spare any words for practicalities." "You love me less now?" "Don't he unkind, Jim. You know better. There is a time when love crowds out every thing else. But that " , " ' We don't, want to break down on our long haul. And we will unless we pull together. I must know how hard to pull." "You are doing all right as it is," said Jim. "I'll take care of the finances. But I'll give vou the nersonal allowances, of course. Ann gladly " j "No," I replied steadily, keeping'the tears hack. "I don't want, it that wav. I wanted you to understand; to see: thp o&? of mv argument. I will not accept it as a concession. (To be continued.) KOLCHAK RUSSIA'S ONLY HOPE, BELIEF OF COLONEL WARD (P.y Associated Tress) LONDON, Oct. fi. Colonel John Ward, who has just returned from S'ria where he commanded a battalion of British troops which helped to overthrow the Bolshevik power there, says: "In my opinion the only chance for democracy in Russia lies in the success of Kolchak. His attitude on the land question shows that he is not the reactionary he has been represented. He sees clearly that the distribution of big estates among the peasantry cannot be interfered with. "It is proposed that those land owners who have survived Bolshevism shall be given compensation for the land they have lost but there is no Idea of restoring the land to them. Kolchak stands up for the poor peasants against what Lenine has been called the 'village of bourgeoisie.' "It is found that well-to-do peasants had murdered many of iJie landowners, given a meagre portion of the poorest land to the -poorest peasants and joined the bulk of the estate to their own holdings. Kolchak. with the advice of representatives of the Allies, decided to secure for the poor peasants a fair distribution of the land. "When this was known the comparatively wealthy peasants, who had secured the biggest share of the land raised the cry that the old state of affairs was to be restored. In some cases they stirred up the peasants to revolt and caused disturbances which had to be put down by force." St. John's Men to Be Banqueted Tonight Returned service men of St. John's Lutheran church -will be honor guests at a banquet to be given this evening It the Young People's society. Several addresses will be made.

PRETTY MAID WHO WILL MAKE HER BOW TO WASHINGTON SOCIETY THIS WINTER

Miss Virginia McKcnney. Miss Virginia McKenncv, the charming and talented daughter of Mi. and Mrs. Fred D. McKenney, will make her bow to Washington society during the forthcoming season. Miss McKenney is one of a large nunber of debutantes who will break into the social Umeliprht of the capital during the first season of brilliant entertaininc since the outbreak of the war.

T. R. WAS TO SPEND SUMMER IN DAKOTA WITH OLD FRIENDS A few old timers who knew Theodore Roosevelt in the days when he was punching cattle in the Bad Lands of the Little Missouri came together at Bill McCarty's Custer Trail Ranch in North Dakota last June. There had j been a "show" roundup as a tribute to the colonels' memory, and the old friends Sylvane Ferris and Will Merrifield, Roosevelt's partners of the Maltese Cross outfit: "Three-Seven Bill" Follis, McCarty and Joe Ferris who took "the dude from New York" on ! his first buffalo hunt were sitting on ihe ground swapping yarn. of the times beyond recall. Hermann Hage(iorn, in the Outlook, describes the scene at the end of the daj : There was a long silence as each of the "old-timers" stared at the green earth about them with distant, dreamy eyes. The glow had Ions faded from Picket Butte and from the long clay ranges that were its neighbors. The sage brush flat, where a few hours before had been the milling, bellowing cattle, the dashing horses and intrepid riders, was a deserted field of dusky lavender. The mess wagon had rattled off long ago. Only a car or two. forty or fifty remained at the edge of th--flat, waiting like a patient horse silently for its master. In the cottonwood grove, where close together the men were sitting, cross legged or leaning pgainst the straight, slender trunks or sprawling on the ground tearing dreamily at the grass blade, the dusk was taking possession. A steer mooed away off among the buttes southeastward. Sylvane looked up. and there was a sad look in his eye. 'It's been very nice, boys." he said, "and I've enjoyed it, enjoyed every minute of it. But I can't help remembering lhat Mr. Roosevelt promised me on the train letween Billings and rargo last Oe-) tober lhat he'd be out here himself j ihis summer to go with m" and Joe j and Merri." .-Id and some of you other boys over his old stamping ground. Well, he won't be here. He won't er r be here again, and for some of us. I guess, the Bad Lands will never be the same again. "He was like a brother to me. We were partners and we were friends. He's gone, and the rest of life witi be mostly just a-remembering of the old days when he was here." Never Better Friend. Sylvane's voice was husky. He cleared It and continued: "We boys we never had a better friend, and Dakota never had a better friend, and the American people never had a better friend. He was brave and square and on the job as president, just a he was brave and square and on th-j job as a cowboy. You couldn't bully him at any time. You couldn't nirike him afraid. You couldn't make him shirk his work or do anything that was mean. "Merrifield and Joe and I, we lived with him; we slept under the same Sure Relief 6 Bell-ans Hot water Sure Relief H2E LL-AES 9FOR INDIGES.ION The Camera Shop 512 Main St. Bring your developing to us.

blanket, we ate out of the same dish. We knkew him so we could look clear through him. and boys, there was nothing there that wasn't straight and clean. There never was a finer set. of men anywhere, taken all in all, than the boys you and I knew and lived with here in the Bad Lands in the old days. I knew them all. I knew thas I knew my old clothes, and, bo s, toll you that the finest of them al. was Theodore Roosevelt. And 1 can't quite get used to the thought that now is the time he promised to come, and he isn't going to be here." His voice was low and a breath of the dusk wind carried away the iast of his words. "If his ghost walks," said Bill Mc Carty, "and if I knew him at all, his ghost, is right with us this minute"' "No." said Joe Ferris, softly but decisively. "No. If it were, we'd have known it. With all us old fellows here he'd have ripped eternity and busted through."

KILLED IN ACCIDENT. WASHINGTON", Oct. fi. Colonel Townsoriil Dorld. rommandf-r of Laneley Field, Yn., nrd on of t'nr firt American officii s to receive an aviator's commit -ion, was killed Sunday at Bustleton V M. the air service va ne,n.r Philadelphia, s advised. Accidents will occur, but infection need not Yon never know just when it is pning to happen. Generally without warning a slip is made a deep cut a broker and bruised skin is the resr.lt. That's tiietiir.eto he e. ireful to guard against infection. There's safety and security in a jar of Resin'l Ointment. Anoint the nur.,1 ar.i bandage it heals tw.re as ia.-t this way. Rejinol Snap an-1 Resmol (intir.eot used Hnt'.yare excellent fnr the trratmei: of ail akin disorder nn limbs, body and iice. They work quickly and well. A t nil arurfrinls. Samples fru from Rtsinol, BalUmwt, Afa. H'ri,'e us. TRACY'S SPECIALS Tuesday and Wednesday P. & G. Naptha Soap 10 for 75 FLOUR Carpenters SI. 45 Pillsbury's 81.70 OLEOMARGARINE Royal Brand, lb T4C Al Xut, lb 35C Why pay the high price for Butter? MATCHES 5 BEANS. Navy. 2 lbs 23 TRACY'S Tea and Coffee House Two Stores 526 Main 1032 Mam

OFFICIALS FIND EVIDENCE OF AN ORGANIZED BAND

Negroes of Arkansas Form Union to Advance Interests of Race. (By Associated Press1) BELAINE. Ark., Oct. 6. This little town breathed easier today than at any time since early the week, when

the race disturbances of a serious na.others havin hoen rcjeasif.d m giving ure began without warning The re- i videncP of - cnaracter. Among lieved feeling was due largely to the lWo ,

u i ,t.p ,lt, uuu. msua.s where federal soldiers and civilian of ficers were on duty continued to be of a reassuring nature. Generally the people here believed the worst of the trouble was over. However, officials were emphatic, in their assertions that there would be j no relaxation of emergency measures and there was no indication that the .'00 soldiers sent here from Camp Fike would be withdrawn soon. The authorities expected to obtain additional information regarding the alleged banding of negroes in this locality through further questioning today of Ed Hicks, said to have been one of the ring leaders of the negro organization known as "The progressive farmers and household union of America." Hicks, who was arrested yesterday, is said to have admitted he was piesident of the organization. Other negroes in custody are said to have declared that Kd Baker, another negro under arrest, was secretary. Were Banded Together. Through this organization officials say the negroes in this locality were handed together for an uprising. Among the papers brought in by patrols is a printed copy of what pur ports to be "the I nited States constitution and by-laws of the progressive NAME 'BAYER' MEANS ASPIRINJS GENUINE Get relief Without Fear as Told in "Bayer Package" "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin" to b genuine must be markeed with the safety "Bayer Crop?." Then you are petting the true, world-famous Aspirin, i prescribed by physicians for over IS years. Always buy an unbroken package of "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin" which contains proper directions to safely relieve Colds. Headache, Toothache, Earache, Neuralgia. Lumbago, Rheumatism, Neuritis, Joint Pains, and Pain generally. Handy tin boxes of twelve tablets cost but a few cents. Druggists also sell larger "Bayer" packages Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacidester of Salicylica cid. Adv.

if 1 ' L Silverware, the pleasing gift for the young bride, one of llvj t i beauty, utility and individuality. 'fw9 10 We are prepared with a good assortment of silverware to ifm I Ifvl make a selection from whether single pieces or complete ImPi V, If It Comes From Jenkins It Will Be Appreciated We invite your early inspection irjf Jenkins & Co. Bl Fortmost Jewelers jr ilpr

farmers and household union of America, the negro business league." The object of the "union" as stated in the pamphlet, "shall be to advance the intt rests of the negro mentally and intellectually, and to make him a better citizen and a better farmer," The constitution authorizes "pass words, door

words, grips and signs, which were in hf rhanwA cvcrv tVireo months nnri I provides for a fine and expulsion for cisciosing secrets. Any exciuaea i member was not to be allowed to reI join "within 09 years." i A negro in custody, when asked by officers as to the extent of the or ganizations membership said he was certain there was 250 and "probably 00." 800 Are Prisoners. Army officers estimated today that the number of negroes that had passed ihrough their hands exceeded SO0, ; aD0Ut j 0 still being in cuftodv the officers planned to resume their search

for hidden fire arms, of which a large provinces. Those persons who are nncuantitv has been seized from negroes ! able to pay their fares to former

whose homes have been searched The number of negroes known to i have been killed by soldiers and pos.-e i men today stood at 14, but officials believed the total number of dead might How Pure Food Can Poison You NR Works Wonders Let the rrorer digestion, assimilation and elimination process of the body mechanism be Interfered with and the purest and most wholesome of food may be converted into dajiEerous, disease-breeding poison. Poor digestion and assimilation mean a poorly nourished body and low vitality. .Poor elimination means cloccged bowels, fermentation, putrliaction and the i formation of poisonous pases which are. absorbed by the blood' end carried through the body. The. result Is weakness, headaches, dizziness, coated tongue, in active liver, bilious attacks, loss of energy, nervousness, poor appetite. Impoverished blood, sallow comrlexion. pimples, s'.iin disease, nd often times serious illness. Can you afford to take chances with constipation? Why rot begin today end take Nature's ReTtedy tNU Tablets' each r.iirrt for a wppk or so until your stomach, liver, bowels and kidneys are Fufflciemly Ftrerjnhened to carry on tvi fo"r? r' o'-cr'on end ellmir.utk - " .

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Clem Thisf Iethwaite's. Richmond. Ind.

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6nn bushrl of fancy Michigan Russets o be sold cheap to he consumer at North loth Street. We deliver. Phone n;rv

HARRY COHN

be double that. White casualties, l:nown, are five dead and six wounded. The latter includes a soldier. Machine gun sergeant. Andrew Sisian. whose home address was given as Buffalo, N. Y. Sisian was said by officers to fihve been wounded accidentally when he dropped his revolver.

j GemXOnS of EdSteTTl Provinces are Eager to Cast Their Votes (By Associated press) BERLIN. Oct. 6 More than 100.000 natives of the Eastern provinces, who are scattered over Germany and who are eligible to vote tn the approaching plebiscite already have registered at the election bureau in Thorn. West Prussia. I Further applications a j in such numbers that it h frmnH rocrv tr. est; are coming in has been fcund found necessarv to establish branch. ! bureaus in Westphalia and the Rhine homes are being given free transportation. A pneumatic hammer for tampering paving stones has been inventedWaste matter in constipated bowels poisons blood and causes much disease. NR keeps system clean, prevents disease, makes body strong. After Dietary Blenders a lot better for H and you'll And yourself tn better phyaica.1 condition than you've been In many a day. Ordinary laxatives, purges ar.d cathartics salts, oils, calomel and tr.T like may relieve the condition for a few hours, but real, lasting benefit can only come thrcutii uso of medicine tUat tones ut and. strengthens the digestive as weU as the elimmative organs. Get a I5c box of Nature's Kenedy (NP. Tabler1 and take cr.i tablet each rir;h for a week. Relief wiU foUow the very first ?ose, but a few davs win elnr?5 before yo-i feel end rciuz th fullest benefit. When you get straightened out and feel Just right agiirs yea need not take medicir.e every day an occasional N'H Tablet w:l! thsi keep jour Evstem in good ctnciiior. and yoi will always feci jour be:. Remember, keeping well is eerier ar.i cheaper than getting v.c'.i. Nature's Remedy iNR Tablet?' an fo' 1. g -.-rateed ad recommended ty