Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 46, Number 209, 14 July 1921 — Page 5

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND., THURSDAY, JULY 14, 1921.

PAGE FIVE

"The Love Pendul

By MARION

enauium

RUBINCAM

(would not advise you to follow it with! more of the short course lessons will(llipn A V PnCO ACTED ,a second. There are other eirla who' be put on in the home kitchen, to ifl linuT lllliA Ur I ill

OUidU KI uuyo. Ill UIgdUUlUg met";

Chapter 3 i REMINISCENCE As I remembered, I had been taken ill in the latter part of the Winter. By the time I was able to walk around and go outdoors the Spring was well under way. The very day that the new visitor came to see me, I was allowed to get up and Bit in an armchair by the window. I had a lovely warm bathrobe of blue velvet with silver tassels, a very expensive gift from my aunt, and I sat rolled up in this while m visitor arranged the apple blossoma in a jar for me. "I've called before, but you were asleep," she said. "I'm Mrs. Taylor." "It's bo sweet of you to come to see me," I answered. "I'm Constance Bennett. I don't know anyone here, so I haven't any visitors." 'You poor dear! And it's so lonesome for you." 1 shook my head. "No, it's bo quiet, and I like it I've never bad much chance to be quiet." The little lady laughed. She was quite small, the same age as Parker, my nurse, but 60 very, very different. My nurse was large and round and pink, and her gray hair Btood out in a wiry fashion, making her round face seem even larger. Mrs. Taylor was small, thin, round

shouldered and neatly dressed. She

had small gray eyes that seemed very intelligent, and gray hair that hung limply around her forehead. She had a large nose for so small a face, a rather nice mouth, and a very stubborn chin.' I liked her Immensely. Twice during her call she got up ana

black roulette wheels, the great lighted chandeliers, the crowding men and women and the eternal singsong of

the little man by the wheel: "Faites vous jeux, messieurs, mesdames, faites vous jeux." until his "make your bets" ran eternally .through my head. "I didn't like Monte Carlo," I answered. "It's strange to hear a young girl say she doesn't like excitement! But you like to dance,' don't you?" "Yes," I answered, but my tone was doubtful. I remembered the winter. Always with my aunt, I went from dance to dance it seemed. We attended teas, and they danced there. We went to luncheon in great hotels, where we danced between bites and gulps. We danced at dinner, and after the theatre and far Into the morning. My dear aunt was generous in many ways an evening usually ruined one or the tulle frock3 she liked me to wear, and 6he never complained of the expense. She bought more frocks, always as delicate and perishable as the other ones. "You see, I was to come out," I told my visitor. "Only I got sick. My aunt took me around a lot even before I was a regular 'deb,' mostly with her crowd, all older people. I couldn't go with the younger ones I wasn't

really out, you see." She didn't, and I went on:

T was to come out in January, but I had a cold and she did not want to introduce me formally to society unless I looked well. I went away on a country house party, supposedly to rest up. But a lot of guests came; It

was as bad as the city. Then she was

win interest you if you give them a chance. Forget that you haven't money and an automobile. Neither of the two makes the man. You can be just as much loved as a man with both, if you are thoughtful and interesting. I think if you had been , more active in your attentions to the girl you took to the week-end party she would have had less opportunity to be with the other girl and less desire

also.

CANNING LESSONS BY VOCATIONAL SCHOOL TO BEGIN AUGUST 3

groups, the matron will invite into this meeting such neighbors as she may desire, and Miss Larsh will meet the group by appointment during the month of August.

Tomorrow "A Message."

ru-airangeu uie uuvs m luoja., . to do it in February and here I am." before she left, she took them out My HtUe old Jad came and ed and fixed them all over again. mv hand

u s tunny to near a gin as young ; as you say it's nice to be quiet," shej said. "Most of them here only want; a chance to make a lot of noise." i "I had so much of it," I said, look-i

ing out the window over the wide green lawn of the sanitarium. She did not answer, so I went on. "You see, I haven't had any particular home. I was at boarding school most of the time, and in girls' camps

Heart Problems

Dear Mrs. Thompson: I took

young lady to a week-end party over the Fourth of July. She has been used to a great deal of attention from

in the summers, and when I was home young men and so I felt very particular

at all. I wa3 at my aunt's. She's Mrs. jnot to 0ffend her in any wav. Most of Bradley Bennett." I stopped, wonder- her friends have money and" machines, ing whether I sounded snobbish. Mrs.wnile j have not anything except a Bradley Bennett was a very import- j moderately good salary. For years my ant social figure in the metropolis, mother has been an invalid and it has and a very wealthy one. But little j taken all mv spare money t0 pay her Mrs. Taylor was unimpressed; I was ' expenses, two months ago she died glad she had never heard of my dis-lan(1 so now j expect to save more, tinguished aunt. I The week-end party was not a suc"Anyway, she entertains a lot. soiCPSS as far as I was concerned. The there were always heaps of people j y0ung lady at once struck up an acolder ones. I was out of it, only I , quaintance with another young lady had to be in the middle of it too. arii the two of them were together and somf how it wasn't restful. I j constantly. The other man did not begged Father to take me to Europe !pepm t0 mjn(i an(j he fither busied one summer, and he did. I hated it!" j himself with other girls or else "Europe! Dear me, I've heard it j stayed with the two girls. I found this was so nice!" Her unsophisticated i imnossible because unless I could have

Interest in vocational school work is now being centered about the short course in canning, consisting of six lessons, which is to be offered by the

vocational department during the month of August. The first lesson is

to be given on Wednesday, Aug. 3.

Miss Bertha Larsh, assistant in vocational education and a specialist in

home economics, is to be in charge. The lessons are carefully planned and

cover a broad field. Lessons planned

for the course include:

Tomatoes Cold pack and open kettle, preserved, pickled and special

recipes.

Beans Cold pack, green, kidney and lima beans, soup vegetable, spe

cial recipes.

Corn Cold pack, salted, corn chowder, special recipes. I Pickles Beets canned cold pack, plain, pickled, carrots, plain, sweet pickled, mustard pickled. Plums, Peaches and Pears Cold pack and open kettle, preserved (five

j recipes), special. Grapes Open kettle, preserved, j jelly, butter, spiced, conserve, crabapple jelly and sweet pickles; special ! recipes. j Two Canning Schools ; There will only be two canning i schools organized this season due to

a! the time limits. Fifteen or more stu

dents will compose a class or school. Each school will meet twice a week until the six lessons are completed. One class will meet on Tuesday and Thursday p. m., 2 o'clock, and the other on Wednesday and Friday p. m.. 2 o'clock. These lessons will be given in regular school kitchens and therefore schools are possible in the following districts: Baxter, Sevastopol, Whitewater, Senior High school, Junior High school, and Hibberd. The first two districts to turn in an enrollment of 15 or more will secure schools. An additional feature of the work is the home demonstration group class. By this arrangement, one or

Holzapfel Funeral Friday;

Will Be Held at Home Funeral services for Anna Laura Holzapfel, will be held Friday after

noon at 2:30 o'clock from the home.

Burial will be made in the Earlham cemetery. Friends may call at any time. She is survived by three sons, Richard R., Harry E., and Henry D., two daughters, Ruth E. Holzapfel and Mrs. Clifford Turner, two brothers, Ray and Dave Edwards, one sister, Pleasant Brown, and eight grandchildren.

WARFEL'S OFFICE AS CHIEF OF OIL BUREAU

INDIANAPOLIS, July 14. Governor McCray finally has decided to apply

' Vila Vinncr" TrMrr t o i VI C i ATI Cif the

state board of health the oil inspection division, headed by Edward

the governor has his mind on another sisting of the governor, state auditor

man. Robinson wished Samuel Braxtan, of Orleans, at the head of the oil plum tree. Braxtan once was a county Republican chairman and a devoted McCray worker. He would like an Orange county postoffice job, according to reports. Has No Authority. The governor has no authority in law to replace Warfel, as the oil inspection chief is appointed by the state

iooa ana arug commissioner. Xor has

Warfel a Republican NocharSe is to J aut ity to appoint the be preferred against Cartel, it isjfood and d., r ,!

understood. However, the governor

wishes the place filled by not merely a Republican but by a Republican of the Watson-McCray faction of the

! party. Hence Mr. Warfel is to go.

For a long time it has been believed by some political observers that sooner or later the governor would succumb to the temptation to change the personnel in the oil inspection division, which commands at least twenty-nine jobs paying nearly $50,000 and further providing a fund of approximately $25,000 for expenses. Under the "right" director the division could be made to produce more than twenty-nine "plums" and also more money to scatter among factionists. Other Complications. Besides the governor's interest in the oil division possibilities three other complications entered into the game. State Auditor W. G. Oliver, who wishes to be a candidate for governor and who is taking a deep interest in all state affairs, wished

Warfel ousted, for the latter was for

,-. ,,,r,..r.K - ! L- s- Bowman when Bowman ran

-uuuc -. " I against Oliver. Warfel and Bowman

juagmeni ior me piamun to .ma hth mmo fmm RinV,H tv,

amount of $1,104.94. and foreclosure of j Lawrence Lyons and Fred B. Robinson!

both former campaign managers for

Mrs. Levi Ritz, Young Wife, Called by Death Saturday ELDORADO, O., July 14. Mrs. Levi Ritz, 25 year3 old, died at her home, three miles southwest of Eldorado, Saturday evening, following the birth of a baby daughter which occurred on the afternoon of the same day. The child is healthy and is doing nicely. Besides her husband she is survived by her parents, Mrs. Randall Cushen, of near Arcanum, five sisters and three brothers. Funeral services were held at the U. B. church at Ithaca, at 10 o'clock Tuesday morning. Burial was made at Ithaca.

a mortgage was given by Judge Bond

in Wayne circuit court Thursday morning in the suit of the Richmond Loan and Savings association vs. George Graef, Mildred Irene Graef, Benjamin F. Harris, the Miller-Kemper company, and Frank T. Strayer, on a note and foreclosure of a 'mortgage.

the governor, had in mind men whom they wished to have Warfel's $3,000

job and Warfel's direction over the

plum possibilities

Lyons wished Charles Wheeler, of Noblesville, put in Warfel's chair, but

AMBASSADOR RESIGNS. 1 SAN SALVADOR, Republic of Sal-! vador, July 14. Dr. Francisco A. De '. Lima, has resigned as Salvadorean minister to Mexico. He has been elected a deputy to the central Amer-: ican Federated assembly.

Fl'LI. OK I'AIXS AND DIZZINESS ( "I was full of pains and had such a ' swimming sensation in my head I could hardly sit in a barber chair to i get a shave," writes Swift Nelson. 211 W. 35th St.. New York. N. Y. "I felt i better the next 24 hours after taking I Foley Kidney Pills, and I haven't had any trouble since." Foley Kidney Pills i give the help needed to overworked. ; deranged kidneys. Their action is i prompt, lx-aling, tonic. Kelieve swollen muscles and joints, backache, i lameness, dizziness and rheumatic I pains. A. G. Luken and Co., 636-62SI Main St. Advertisement. '

Chili Con Carne Supplies Coriender Seed Chili Beans Chili Pepper (peds) Chili Meat We sen Skimmer's the highest grade Macaroni, Spaghetti, Egg Noodles and other Macaroni Products. John M. Eggemeyer & Sons Bee Hive Grocery 3 Phones

state board of health which appoints the commissioner. A committee con-

and secretary of state, select the

health board. . . . . However, the governor has let It be known in the department that he wishes the Warfel job placed athis Cisposal. The " provisions of thelaw for keeping the appointments out of politics apparently are not to have a bearing where there is a case of political expediency." .

CHICAGO GETS E1KS HOME LOS ANGELES, Cal.. July 14. Chicago was selected as the location of the permanent headquarters of the Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks by the grand lodge of the order Wednesday. -

remark made me adore her at once.

"It is. only Father was not interested in the things I wanted to see I liked the little old villages and Father only liked Farl3 and Monte Carlo."

her alone I did not want her at all. On the way home I told her I was sorry I had been so distasteful to her. She said I had not and I insisted that I had and we had a quarrel. When we parted she would scarcely speak to

'Monte Carlo but don t they play, me. I care very much for her and am

rarda thcro and bet money it's quite sorry I offended her. I wrote her a famous, isn't it?" note apologizing, but as yet she has I adored her still more for her un-! not answered it. Would you advise me worldliness. I remembered Monte j to write again if I do not hear from the

Carlo as I had seen it pictorially, a gem set by the blue sea, a delight when I could get away and with a

hired guardian, drive to all the quaint

first letter? What can I do to be pleasing to her? CLARENCE. Judging from your letter, you have a negative way of doing things.- In-

placr-s noarby. But I was rarely al-: stead, of being very particular not to lowed this. Father was proud of me; offend her in any way, ' you should because I was pretty. He put mo in ; have been particular to please her. clothes too old and too fancy for my i The first way is too passive, while age I was only 15 then and took! with the second method you would be me into the great gambling halls. I active and more interesting. I remembered the spinning red and' If the first letter is not answered, I

NERVOUS, IRRITABLE,

AILING W

OMEN

Mrs, Britten Tells How She Was Restored To Health After Suffering for More Than A Year.

Another Triumph for Lydia E. Finkham's TegctaMe Compound

7m

Dimondale, Mich. "I had inflammation and a displacement and weakness, and it had been neglected so long that it caused great pain, and this affected my mind and nerves so that I was very irritable. I had severe pains every month, so that I was often obliged to lie in bed for two days at a time. I suffered for more than a year before my friends said, ' Why don't you try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound?' So 1 purchased one bottle after another until I had taken ten bottles, then Lydia E. Pinkham's SanativeWash. I received so much benefit from this treatment that I am now able to do my own work." Mrs. W.D. Britten, R. No. 2, Dimondale, Mich. Another Michigan Woman says: " I was bothered for a long time with female troubles ana was so nervous I felt almost afraid at times. I also had a pain in my right side and was certainly in a bad way.

Lydia L.Fmkhams Vegetable Compound ha3 relieved me of these nervous feelings and pains and I am much better in every way. I don't know just how many bottles I have taken, but I took it for nearly a year and it has done me a world of good." Mrs. Jessie Granger, R. No. 8, Box 51, Kalamazoo, Michigan. v Good health is a woman's greatest asset. With it she may be the inspiration of her husband, a happy mother, and the life of the home. Without it she suffers agonies herself, nousehold duties are a burden, and her family is made miserable by her condition. Is it any wonder that these women were nervous and irritable after suffering so long from such deranged conditions? Such ailments act directly upon the nerve3, and it has been said that a large percentage of nervous prostration.nervous despondency, "the blues," and nervous irritabilty of women arise from some derangement of the female organism. If women who are in this condition would only profit by the experience of others and take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound at once, much suffering and unhappiness would be averted, as everyone knows a nervous, irritable, ailing mother makes the home unhappy and her condition irritates both husband and children. Lydia 13. Pinkham's Private Text-Book upon ''Ailments Peculiar to Women" will be sent to you free upon request. "Write to The Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Massachusetts. This book contains valuable information. Advertisement.

1

A Great Food Discovery

From Rameses I to the present time the whole wheat grain has been the most perfect food given to man. It contains in proper proportion all the elements needed for building and sustaining the perfect human body. The problem has been how to make the whofc wheat grain digestible in the human stomach. That problem was solved by the man who invented

Shredded

Wheat

k

In making Shredded Wheat Biscuit the whole wheat grains are first thoroughly cleaned (no small, broken or defective grains are used), then boiled in steam. The softened grains are then drawn into filmy, porous shreds, which are formed into biscuits (or little loaves) and baked In coal ovens at a high temperature. This process breaks down the starch cells in the center of the wheat so the digestive fluids can get at them. The mineral salts and vitaniines (so necessary to normal growth) and the bran, which is needed to stimulate "bowel exercise," are retained. Delicious for any meal with milk or cresn., sliced bananas, raisins, prunes or other fruits.

Vacation Music

Your party will not be complete unless you arrange to have music. Take the Starr Vacation Model Phonograph and you can have the kind of music you want at any time you want it. We are offering a genuine Starr-made phonograph, with spruce horn, automatic stop, large motor, etc., complete with ten records, for $73.50. A small payment down, with ample time to pay the balance, will put one in your possession.

The Starr Piano Co.

931-935 Main Street

Richmond, Indiana

Buick D-35 Touring Model Cheap if Sold at Once Chenoweth Auto Co.

1107 Main St.

Phone 1925

i 1 n 4W

'Raspberry Shortcake!"

JUST watch him sit up and take notice when you bring: in that raspberry shortcake! Luscious, juicy berries between 'shortcake" that melts in your mouth. He'll want an extra bicj piece to begin with and then come back for more. So will you, for things baked with Valier's Enterprise Flour are good to the last crumb. Enterprise is milled from the pick of the hard winter wheat crop, and it's only the best part of that the white centers. Enterprise is reliable, too its Quality never varies. That' s one reason why it' s so economical. Enterprise costs more but you won't waste it in expensive failures. Besides a sack goes further due to its concentrated strength. Your grocer has Enterprise. '

wmiintBmHitBiiiniiiniiHiiiiiiriMiiinimiiiimiiuiimiiiuuiunimiiimiwniiii 1 Holthouse Saves You Money 1 on Furniture f Holthouse Furniture Store! I 530 Main St. 1 liimHiHtiiiiwiHninHiHtntiiuiitliilminfuiiiiiiiuuimiitufiilijiiHiiiiiitwuui

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Classified Advertising Always Pays

Don't Miss Our Big Shoe Sale WESSEL SHOE CO. 718 Main St.

ii-"vunjLru'V'u"u'

Personal Service Regardless of Size of Deposits First National Bank Southwest Corner Ninth and Main

m

i

EnterpifefiBouT

1 he rioosier store

m m ii t? j

p uners ior rriuay

and Saturday

MEN'S BALBKIGGAN UNION SUITS, short sleeves, ankle

length, sizes 34 to 46; special, a suit S5c

MEN'S BATHING SUITS, sizes 38 to 44; special, suit. . .1.25

BOYS' UNION SUITS, Mesh, Nainsook and Balbriggan, sizes 4 to 16 years; special, suit,50? BOYS' SPORT BLOUSES, plain blue and fancy stripes, all sizes ; special 59 Men's extra good quality WORK SOCKS, all colors and sizes; special, 2 pairs for 25?

BOYS' WASH TROUSERS, dark or light colors, sizes 8 to 17; very special, a pair 89c MEN'S NAINSOOK UNION SUITS, no sleeves, knee length, sizes 34 to 46 ; special, a suit 69 BOYS' BATHING SUITS, sizes 8 to 14 years; special, a suit 1 4 .1.00 Look Ladies

s

illlfr ' -J LI V'-

Ladies' White Canvas Lace S r t i i

uxioras, military neeis, a

great value at

$1.98

Ladies' Bathing Slippers get

in the swim.

$1.00

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