Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 46, Number 298, 27 October 1921 — Page 9

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND., THURSDAY, OCT. 27, 1921.

NINE

Celebrate Their 53rd Wedding Anniversary

Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Forbes

fRy Associated Pross) OYSTER BAY, N. Y... Oct. 27. Residents of this little hamlet today bow-

tablespoonsful sugar; 1 teaspoonful of ed their heads in sorrowful memory of

salt; 2 eggs; Vcup milk; Ucup cocoa- , beloved fellow villager.

While the rest of the nation has

nut; 1 tablespoonful Mazola

Sift flour Rait and hakinc nowHer

Add Mazola to milk, then add to dry j dedicated the day to celebrating the ingredients, and add egg yolks. Beat sixty-third anniversary of Theodore

whites stiff and fold in.

Baking Powder Biscuits I 2 cups Faultless flour; 4 tablespoonsful Calumet baking poyder; 1 teaspoon salt; 2 tablespoons Mazola; to cups of milk. Sift dry ingredients, add liquids and mix. White Sauce 2 tablespoons Faultless flour; IV2 cups Mazola; 1 cup milk; Vs teaspoon salt. Salmon Croquettes One ordinary sized can of salmon flakes. Add: cup India relish or chow-chow, 1 tablespoon chopped onion, cup thick white sauce, 1 cups cracker crumbs, teaspoon salt Mix together, shape, then roll in cracker crumbs. Pip in one egg beaten slightly with one teaspoon cold water. Roll again in cracker crumbs. Fry in deep fat. Dishes which will be prepared Friday will include critic salad dressing, tuna fish sandwiches, French dressing with variations, chiffonade salad dressing, and Thousand Island dress-

or two to the cemetery, he must still traverse the town and meet with constant reminders of the man whose life there has become rooted in the traditions of the little community. The

legend on the cornerstone of a public building sets forth Colonel Roosevelt's connection with its rearing; a signboard's hand with rigid index finger points the way to Sagamore Hill, once

jthe "Little White House," and now

, the residence of the former president's iwidow; nearly every store has its life J size portrait, its colored representa

tion of Roosevelt mounted and in the uniform of a Rough Rider, or its poster showing him delivering a campaign ' address from a flag draped stage. The elm and oak shaded highway leading to the cemetery and continuing on to Camp Upton, where American soldiers trained for service in

France, is furrowed by the feet of j hundreds of boys whom Roosevelt entertained at Sagamore Hill during brief leaves when he used to say he would willingly have missed being president to change places with one of them.

Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Forbes celebrated their 53rd wedding anniversary fecores or incidents illustrating the

with a family dinner at their home, 58 State street, Sunday. They were 1 esteem in which foreign visitors re

gard the memory of Roosevelt have been marked before the gate of the cemetery plot. The grave is near the top of a conical knoll rising in one corner of the little burial grounds. Overhead the autumn foilaga of encircling locust trees forms the vaulted ceiling of a natural cathedral. Facing it, a mile or more distant across the silver reach of Oyster Bay Cove, rises Sagamore Hill, somber under its cloak of feathery evergreens. Inside the railing is a simple headstone of white marble between ,two sentinel cedars; beside the grave a tiny flag or two, faded, but erect as was formerly the soldierly figure of the man who sleeps beneath. Italians Show Esteem. A month ago four well dressed Italians approached the plot, knelt at the gate and crossed themselves. After

remaining silent in prayer for several minutes, they again made the sign ofj the cross and then began scooping up 1 handfuls of earth which they put in I their pockets. At this juncture a!

guard interfered. x

"Mister," one of the quartet pleaded, "we loved Colonel Roosevelt. All Italy

FREE COOKING SCHOOL RECIPES SECURED FOR

PALLADIUM'S READERS

With an attendance of over 500 at the first day of the Palladium cooking school and an Interest equal to that shown on the last day of the previous school, it appears that the cur

rent echool will achieve even greater ;

popularity than did last year's venture. A number of dishes were prepared before the audience Wednesday afternoon, those !n charge explaining the processes as they worked, and serving samples of the food as they finished, thus giving a theory, putting it to the test, and submitting the results to the spectators as a jury. During intermissions, and before the program started, the crowd was amused by music furnished by a Brunswick phonorranh standine on the

platform, and the whole nroceedines : married at Bethel, and both of them were born and reared near that town.

were kept informal so as not to tire Mr. Forbes is a Civil war veteran. Their two daughters, Mrs. Minnie Doren those attending. and Mrs. Eva Ometz, also live in Richmond. They have four grandchildren Test Fireless Cooker. and one great grandchild. The following were present Sunday to congratuSome interest was manifested in the -late the couple: Mr. and Mrs. E. F. Doren, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Ometz, Mr. fireless cooker, which has already' and Mrs. Russell Doren, lUrs. Margaret Clark, Paul, Elizabeth and Howard been tested by having a cake baked; Doren. who are grandchildren; Betty A. Doren, their great grandchild, Mrs. in it with only 20 minutes of fire. A I B. F. Doren. Mr. and Mrs. N. E. Davis and Mr. and Mrs. Walter Williams.

periect cake was the result of leaving it In for 45 minutes. The demonstration this afternoon included the display of a roast which had been finished in the fireless cooker. A cake will be baked in it on Saturday. Recipes for the dishes which vera prepared Wednesday, are as folows: Coeoanut Fritters lVa cups sifted pastry flour; 1V&

teaspoons Calumet baking powder;

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loved him, too. Tomorrow we start home and we want to take some dirt from near the grave to his friends over there.". They were allowed to depart with their relics. A few days afterward a man and two boys, of about 12 and 14 years.

looked in silence through the bars for

some minutes. Then the elder ad-1 him

dressed the others, apparently hisi

sons. "Boys, he said, "there Ites the body of a man a real he man, who was in public life from the time he was 21 until his death. During that time no man could ever point the finger of

ROCKVILLE SUSPECT HELD. SHELBYVILLE. Ind., Oct 27 WaK ter Edward Jackson, arested here, is' being held on a charge of Issuing fraudulent checks. Officers are inclined to connect the man with the robbery at

)Rockport, led., Monday night, when

shame at him and say he did a crooked Jibe safe in a grocery store was blown thing. Try, if you can, to oe likeiamd about 400 stolen. At the time

if his arrest he had $338 in currency.

c

OYSTER BAY BOWS IT S HEAD IN SORROWFUL TRIBUTETO MEMORY OF THEODORE ROOSEVELT

WOMAN HOSPITAL TRUSTEE INDIANAPOLIS. Ind., Oct. 27 Gov. McCray has appointed Mrs. Lucian Harris of Rising Sun, as a member of the board of trustees for the Southeastern hospital for the insane at Madison. Mrs. Harris succeeds E. S. Roberts, of Madison. Word of acceptance of the appointment was received from Mrs. Harris by Miss Adah Bush, secretary of the governor.

Roosevelt, stateman, president and

man of letters. Oyster Bay remembers the familiar, sympathetic, bighearted "Teddy," whose grave on the hill top is an ever present reminder of their loss. The little wooded cemetery has become the object of pilgrimages from over the world. The older children of Oyster Bay Cove School, which nestles in a grove of trees a few hundred yards from Roosevelt's grave, remember him best as the Santa Claus of their annual Christmas celebrations. Some of them now sit in the seats anl use the desks once occupied by the elder children Kermite, Theodore, Archie and Ethel. None of these has forgotten the red pillow-fattened figure.

rosy cheeks, powdered mustache and grotesque false beard of the principal actor in their Yuletide pageant. Had Letters Written Three weeks before Christmas it was Colonel Roosevelt's custom to summon the teachers to Sagamore Hill a mile away from there instruct them to have all the children write letter to "Santa' telling what they wanted him to bring them. Then, after all the scribbled requests had come in. the Colonel and Mrs. Roosevelt would go in to New York and buy the gifts asked for, adding to each a "toot" of rock candy, a confection of which the Colonel recalled he had been inordinately fond as a boy. On Christmas Eve he and Mrs. Roosevelt would drive over to the school, where, under a great elm tree,

he would distribute the presents to 40 cr more youngsters and then join in singing carols and romping and laughing with, the spirit of play that never quite deserted him. From the time his own children were old enough to go to school, he missed playing Santa Claus but twice once when he was in Africa, and again during his illness at Roosevelt hospital. Even on that last Christmas Eve the children were not forgotten. Colonel

Roosevelt delegated Archie to attend to his annual duties, telling his son what kind of candy to buy and how to play the part of Saint Nicholas. The right Archie played Santa Claus his father told friends who visited his bedside how much he missed participating in the event. Thousands Visit Grave. Though Roosevelt's birthday has become recognized as the appropriate time for paying formal tribute to his memory, thousands of people have visited his grave during the year. Flowers by the basketfull were strewn upon it daily last summer by motor

ists who gathered the blooms as they toured over Long Island. On several Sundays their offerings covered the

little plot inside the massive iron grating with a floral blanket several feet thick. The traveler falls under the spell of Roosevelt's memory almost before dismounting from the train that carries him from New York to the former president's home town. As he turns his back on the railway station he is noisily solicited as a fare by "jitney" drivers offering to show him the Roosevelt "sights" in exchange for a none too modest honoraium. If the wayfarer acceeds, he is driven through the town over smooth streets, paved many years ago, he will be told, through the public spirited efforts of Colonel Roosevelt. And if he seta out to walk the mile

D

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The Palladium's

COOKING

SC

00

Only Two More Days

H:

Free Co ffee and P-Nut Butter

Each day at the Palladium's Free Cooking School Tracy's T. C. H. Brand Coffee and P-Nut Butter will be Given Away FREE. No charge for admission to the Cooking School and you may get Coffee or P-Nut Butter Free. Bring the coupon you get at the Cooking School to our store, filled out, and we will allow you 10c on a pound of 35c T. C. H. brand Coffee.

!PmiMiiimimmmumimitiiiltuinmilniMiiliMHHnnniHmnimmiuninmmilHi I TRACY'S Si SPECIALS i CARPENTER'S FLOUR, 24 pounds 89c ! 1 GOLD MEDAL FLOUR, 24 pounds $1.13 j JERSEY CORN FLAKES 2 for 20c One Box Free 1 This makes a 38c value for 20c 5 ! MAZOLA OIL, Pint 30c 1

Raisins Currants Prunes Peaches Rice Seeded New Stock New Pack New Pack New Crop 15 oz. 23 15 oz. 23d 2 lbs. 25 20d 2 lbs- 15d

Fruit Special Packed in Heavy Syrup

No. 2yz Peaches

No. 2'2 Plneappl

No. ZVz Bartlett

No. 2 Raspberr

e .... I Pears, f ries I

29c

r 3 for

Plums 5 Lbs. SUGAR, 31c Jees 2inforS25d Flne Cane ranUlated 2CfoVD4l7 P Hebe Pet 1 Eagle I Carnation Milk, tall Milk, tall Brand, 20d Milk, tall 9d 2 for 23d 'or SI. 15 I 12d

SOAP Lenox, large bar 4c Luna White, 6 for 25c White Flyer, 5 for 19c P. & G. Naptha, 10 for 57c

SOAP Palmolfve, 2 for 15c Jap Rose. 2 for 19c Lava Soap 6c Kirk's Hard Water, 3 for . .25c

Words He Would Like to Say MUSIC can sometimes tell the "sweetest story" more truly than words, if you have a Brunswick to play for you. Call at our shop and hear the Brunswick Phonograph and Brunswick Records (especially the new Super-Features) and learn about our convenient payment plan. Then tell "dad" you want a Brunswick, and why. Come in today. Come in and hear "MA" "ALL BY MYSELF" "WABASH BLUES" and other popular records.

If you haven already attended the Free Cooking School go nowonly two more days left Don't miss the last two talks and demonstrations given by noted domestic Science teacher. Hear what she has to say for Calumet why she has used it for years why she prefers it to all other

baking powders. See results obtained with Calumet by actual tests. You will learn many new hints on baking which you can apply in your own kitchen. After you attend one of these lectures you will never wonder why Calumet is used by more Chefs, Domestic Scientists, Restaurants, Hotels, Railroads andHousewives than any other brand. You will realize the reason best results. -

1 TB A KING POWDER :ggoii-T-' 'made by a trust' V CONTENTS

Miss Brumstad Will Give a Special Demonstration with

aSAU-QJEBETF

BAKING POWDER See this demonstration learn what a small amount of Calumet is required to produce perfect results. You save when you buy it moderate in price. You save when you use it has more than the ordinary leavening strength, therefore you use less. Calumet is pure and sure. Order a can on your way home from the demonstration. . Beautiful Cook Book FREE There is a Calumet Cook Book for every housewife enclose the slip found in the EDund can in an envelope send it to the Calumet aking Powder Company, Chicago the Cook Book will be sent free, postpaid.

An Invitation to All the Ladies of Richmond and Vicinity You are cordially invited to attend THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM'S

National Biscuit Company Crackers and Cakes Crackers Chocolate Chocolate Fig 2 pounds puff Graham Newton 25 29 . 29 Lb. 19 Lb.

26 Pound

Brea.d B e-fcter

I FARWIG HOME MADE BREAD 1-pound Loaf, 8c l-pound Loaf, 12c I Try It There Is None Better miiimiiiuiiHniHiMmimmiiimMimiiumiiitnmiiniimtmwmiHiimfiMitmm

TRACY'S

526 Mam

2 Stores

TEA and COFFEE HOUSE 1032 Main

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ree

Cooking

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Which will be held each afternoon from 2 to 4:30 o'clock Tomorrow, and Saturday of This Week in the COLISEUM. Miss Brunstad and Miss Denehie, noted Domestic Science experts, will be in complete charge.

EVERYTHING ABSOLUTELY

FREE

Samples daily. Food daily, Flour, COME Coffee, Oats, Milk, etc., given away. DAILY

The Firms Who Have Agreed to Participate and Co-operate in Making this School a Big Success are

The Richmond Baking Co. Bread and Wafers

Tracy's Tea & Coffee House Coffee and Peanut Butter Himes Bros. Dairy Milk and Cream Lee B. Nusbaum Co. House Dresses and Aprons

Romey Furniture Co. Chambers Fireless Gas Ranges Brunswick Phonographs and Records

Economy Creamery Co. Economy Creamery Butter

Weiss Furniture Store McDougall Kitchen Cabinets, Refrigerators and Kitchen Tables W. H. Hood Company Grocery Jobbers Oats and Pineapples Calumet Baking Powder Co. Baking Powder

Bender Ice Cream Co. ; Brick Ice Cream A. H. Dorsel Milling Co. Faultless Flour and Biscuit Flour Corn Products Refining Co. Mazola, Karo and Argo Starch

ADMISSION FREE EVERYBODY WELCOME