Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 44, Number 313, 16 October 1919 — Page 11
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THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. THURSDAY, OCT. 16, 1919. PAGE ELEVEN SPANISH EFFECTS SEEN EVERYWHERE Heart and Beauty Problems By Mrs. Elisabeth Thompson She Married An Average Man BY ZOB BECKLEY
Dear Mrs. Thompson: I am a young grl and have a father and mother with a large family. We have got along very well until of late when my mother became dissatisfied with her home. She has taken the baby and left us. As I am the oldest I feel it Is my duty to keep house for my father and the children. Can you advise me how to keep the family together? YOURS TRULY. You are having a great test of your character and a great opportunity. In later years you will find that happiness has come from service to others and the love you have earned. You must be a little mother now. Your greatest service will be to keep your family happy and hopeful. Be
careful not to do all the work your
self. Let your brothers and sisters assume some of the responsibility be
cause it is important that you should not become physically worn out. When a woman is tired, she is irritable, and as a little mother you cannot afford
to be irritable.
Read as much as possible, because this will help you to think of other things besides your housework. I would suggest biography reading, be
cause you will be inspired with what
Dear Mrs. Thompson: I have been going with a young man two years my senior for several months. During that time I have grown to love him and always thought he cared a great deal for me. Since I have been going with him I have accepted dates with other boys, but have never told him about them. He has said things, however, which make me think he knowa and 13 jealous. I haven't seen him much lately and think he is angry. I would like very much to go with
this boy again, but also want to go with my other friends. What would
you advi3e me to do? I consider myself too young to go with one boy
steady. - Y. z
The young man had no exclusive right to you and should be willing to have you go with others until he feels in a position to ask you to marry him. It never pays to be untruthful about dates with other young men. I judge, however from your letter that you did
not deny going with other young men but siniDlv didn't mention the fact.
Do not try to regain his friendship,
because if he is going to be unreason
nthAr n.nr,le Vvo rtnrm. Others have i able you will noi ae nayyy io5eiuei
borne great burdens, too. and they friends. He may, however care enhave come out bigger and better souls ough for you to come back whether
because of them. 'you go ua uiu ui um.
Household HintsBy Mrs. Morton
RECIPES FOR A DAY Left-over Special Left-over beef
ana gravy, or me uacjis ui vmn.tu
and neck saved from previous day's dinner. Stew until bones can be removed, then take meat and broth. Warm and add any left-over vegetables. Beans, carrots, peas and corn are especially good. Macaroni, rice or crumbs should be added to stiffen. Salt and pepper to season. P.n careful to stir no more than
necessary. When heated through, set in a greased bake dish, cover with crumbs, dot with butter and brown in oven. Cabbage Salad One cup shredded cabbage, one hard boiled egg, one tablespoon chopped pickle, one tablespoon chopped green pepper, one tablespoon chopped parsley. Mix, moisten with mayonnaise dressing and serve on lettuce leaf. Nut Cakes One-Quarter cup shortening, one-half cup sugar , two egg yolks, one-half cup molasses, one-half cup sour milk, one and one-half cup pastry flour, one teaspoon cinnamon, one-half teaspoon cloves, one teaspoon soda, two egg whites beaten very light, one cup nuts, chopped. Cream shortening, beat in sugar, yolks, molasses and sour milk; beat in the dry ingredients sifted together then the egg whites and nuts. Bake in eighteen tin3 and frost or not. Rice With Eggs One cup of rice, two quarts water, cook together for twenty minutes, drain, place in oven to dry. Poach six eggs and arrange on top of the rice, which has been placed on a platter. Brown three tablespoons of butter and pour over rice
and eggs. Cahbaae Salad Eaual amounts of
celery and mangoes, chopped fine; j one small head of cabbage, French fmf .dressing; garnish with celery tips and V nutsGOOD EGG DISHES Baked Eggs Cover a shallow dish with buttered cracker crumbs and drop in eggs; season with salt and pepper, pour over 2 tablespoons milk; add a few small pieces butter and cover with crumbs; bake in a moderate oven. Beet and Egg Salad Dice 2 well cooked beets; cut in small pieces 2 hard boiled eggs. Mix with beets. Serve on head of head lettuce and garnish with mayonpaise dressing and a few sprigs of parsley.
Deviled Eggs 4 egg9, 1 teaspoon vinegar, Vz dozen sweet pickles. 1 teaspoon sugar, 2 tablespoons minced ham. pinch of salt, dash of red pepper. Boil until hard the eggs, cut through center and take out the yolks, to the mashed yolks add pickles, chopped fine; minced ham, vinegar, sugar and salt. Mix all together. Now fill these egg halves with this mixture, heaping up well, a dash of red pepper over top, set in ice box to cool. Eggs Baked in Pepper Cases Cut & thick slice from the top of green peppers and remove the seeds and place in cold water to soak. Make two cups c.f cream sauce. Place the peppers in :i baking dish and add one-half cup of vater to prevent the peppers from breaking. Xow place in each pepper; 1 tablespoon of cream sauce. 1 tablespoon of fine crumbs. Break in one egg. Cover with cream sauce and then uilh firo r-vn ,1 1. nn.l (k.
anil bake fur L'O minutes. Just five
minutes before removing, place a strip of bacon on top of each pepper and serve with cream sauce.
GOOD RECIPES Veal Pot Pie Have the butcher cut one and one-quarter pounds of veal for stewing and then wash quickly and place In a saucepan and add three cups of boiling water. Two onions, one faggot of soup herbs. Bring to a boil and cook slowly until tender, usually about one and onequarter hours. Now lift meat into a baking dish and thicken the gravy. Season and add Four large potatoes, cut in half and parboiled, four tablespoons of finely minced parsley, one-half teaspoon of thyme, two teaspoons of salt, one teaspoon of parprika. Mix well, and then cover with a crust of plain pastry and bake in a
slow over for thirty-five minutes.
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It looks as though all of our fashionable women will soon be jrarbed in costumes appropriate for a Carmen or a Maria Rosa. All of the new frocks are taking; on different aspects peculiar to old Spain and what with the lace mantillas, the large fans, the pre valance of the distended hip line and the new cavalier skirt, one may expect to see red roses tucked behind m. lady's ear and perhaps a dagger in her belt.
I have been wondering for days
whether to tell Jim about Eric Sands'
letter, written from the military hos
pital at Vichy. I should not have
hesitated a moment were it not for Jim's proneness to snap-judgment.
While it is not precisely a love letter, there is a tender quality to it that Jim will immediately misunderstand. The passage, for instance, where Eric says, "To live at all I have forced myself to think of you," etc. And his reference to the firelight on my "glistening copper hair." But after a man has lain wounded on a battlefield for two days, amid the bodies of the killed and the moans of the dying, and has fought death for
w-eeks in a strange land, tended by alien hands, however kind, he is not in a normal condition of mind. With weak body and shattered nerves, you write well, almost anything. Especially a man of Eric Sands' type the gentle, introspective student type of man. However, I have no feeling of guilt in regard to Eric. In our brief friendship we spent more time in trampling the lively English country than in talking love. There may have been an underlying, unspoken sentiment of tenderness, for we were both very young and just getting our first thrilling aste of life and man-and-woman
comradeship. And it is very dear to me "How I should love to send some thing to Eric Sands this Christmas season," I said to Jim tonight. "I have a poor little letter from him. He's been wounded in the war." "That chap still writing to you. after he knows you're married?" my husband asked. He doesn't know. He didn't get my letter telling him." "Well, then, I don't see that you can do anything but wait till he does know."
"I we could send him a parcel of delicacies or small comforts, dear," I
Victims of Reds Devour Horses Killed in Battle
(By Associated Press) PARIS, Oct. 16. American Red Cross relief just returned here from Budapest tell a harrowing story of the extremes to which the civil population were reduced when the Bolshevik and Rumanian armies struggled for mastery of the city, and staple food supplies disappeared from the market. As the troops swept by leaving behind them calvary and artillery horses killed In action, men and women from the Budapest supurbs, made desperate by privation, descended upon the battle fields and vied with one another
for the meat supply thus made available. They fell upon the carcasses, cutting away chunks of meat with
pocket-knives and cleavers, and carrying them off wrapped in old news
papers.
At a recent public sale of personal
property held m Little Britain town
ship, Pennsylvania, a carpet that had seen forty years of hard service sold
for 90 cents a yard.
Seven presidents of the United
States have married widows Washington, Jefferson, Madison, Jackson,
Fillmore, Benjamin Harrison, and Woodrow Wilson.
suggested. "I pity the soldiers and all who are suffering in this war." "You know what they say about pity, my dear; you know what it's akin to. By the way, Where's the letter?" I produced it with a feeling that there would be some unpleasantness. To withhold it would have made me feel guilty and uncomfortable, however. Jim read it through silently. The room was as still as a tomb, save for the purring of the yellow cat. Max, on my lap.
I scratched Max's throat, his warm
furriness making me feel so uneasy. Jim laid the letter down on the
table impatiently.
"There's the makings of a fine little affair here," he remarked. "The man
writing you love letters full of romantic reminiscences, and you sending him packages across the seas! Of
course, if you still care for him '
"Stop, Jim!" I commanded. "I will
not have you interpret this thing to
suit yourself. You know beyond ques tion that I love you, and only you
It is neither fair nor delicate of you
to imagine what is not so."
"This letter leaves very little to the imagination," retorted Jim. "I
know his type of man and I know
your well, your leaning toward the sentimental, Ann. You say you are
only sorry for him. Maybe you think
so. But you care more than that."
"If that were true, would I have
frankly shown you this letter?"
"Yes, you might have. Women are
never direct in their methods. Their actions, like their loves, take devilish courses. I am only warning you, Ann.
you are starting a dangerous game.'
If Jim keeps insisting that I am in love with Eric Sands I shall begin to
believe it myself. (To be continued.)
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How to Avoid Many ChjMhood Ailments
"The care, of the teeth should begin as soVi s the child has a tooth to be caredVor,' says Dr. Louise Allen Moore. laually this is left until the child compliinp, of toothache. Few parents seeni to -realize that some of the most serioVj ailments of childhood are directly dm to such neglect. Unhealthy teeth and inflamed gums are the best places for germs to start. These multiply into millions in a day nnd are swallowed in Mich quantity that the tender body cannot resist the att;ck. Fever, chill, stomach and intestinal disorders are common results. "When teeth first come through the gums they should be cleaned and polished regularly with an orangewood stick which has been dipped in Once-a Week Tooth Polish. This is entirely harmless to the little one's teeth and gums, and is pleasant to the taste. Save the child's first teeth in this way and he will take care of the second himself, the habit b-ing formed. Once-a-Week Tooth Polish, by the way, is the best thing adults can use, as well as children, to keep the teeth perfectly clean, white, free from stains and tartar, and to prevent decay. It can be had at any drug store. It may be used with a tooth brush the same as ordinary dentifrices." Adv.
i&!LflFisra
T .1
xxuu a. way irom tne snow, trie cola an
the coal bills.
Sunshine and bracing air will h
the wear or work, and worry. V
You may live at resort hotels, inland or
beside a summer sea. Or occupy your own bungalow. En route visit the national parks, national monuments and other winter resorts. See Hawaii, too. Ask for information about Excursion Fares to certain winter resorts. "California for the Tourist " and "Hawaii, "and other resort booklets, on request. Let?he local ticket agent help plan your trip or apply to the Nearest Consolidated Ticket Office or address nearest Travel Bureau, United States Railroad Administration, 646 Transportation Eldg., Chicago; 143 Liberty St., New York City; 602 Healey Bldg., Atlanta, Ga. Please indicate the places you wish to see en route.
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UnitedStatesRailroad Administration
With
Every Meal
Fragrant Apple Pudding
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Delightful in Aroma and Taste makes a most appealing dessert nutritious and inexpensive. Steam apple or other pudding in the Aluminum Pudding Pan and the pudding, deliciously light and fluffy, will delight you, A set of "Wear-Ever" in your kitchen is a sign of refinement no less than is a set of fine china in your dining room. Look for ihenrVcar-Ever" trade mar on the hollom of each utensil Replace utensils that wear out with utensils that " Wear-Ever " The Aluminum Cooking Utensil Co., New Kensington, Pa.
TRADEMARK
An Ad In The
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adium
orne
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