Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 176, 26 July 1922 — Page 5
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND., WEDNESDAY, JULY 26, 1922,-
PAGE FiVii
in
j
w H by Marion Rubin cam
Varied and Appetizing Meat Dishes at Little Cost
here for places where there is a chance
for them to have a career oui i . ieat is undeniably one of the most haven't the courage. That takes moral expenjve items in the food bill of the
and physical
neither." So she believed!
courage, and
I have rdinary K7?,.3fS,I DU Fe?- ! " Frx? hthsf " SSfiit?. !'- . r-
Once, when she was 17. she wrote: j The numbr of 'tMt dishes wnicn J taton ana sister, LUen Oaul oi vin"Being lonely has so many advan-' gcod cook can ma'ke. out of the j f - Vlslted .Ir- M'
tages. I never thought aDout mat oe-.cheaper cut3 of meat or ft-over"iL"'" "rT ' , ! 6" "It;
A LITTLE GIRL Chapter 9 One o'clock in the morning Is a dreary sort of time, and a bedroom furnished with discarded odds and ends of furniture and hopelessly faded curtains is a dreary sort of place. Dora huddled against the register, which sent out nothing but faintly warm air from a heater long since tanked for the night. She had wrapped a blanket around herself over her bathrobe, but that did not keep her entirely warm. The gas jet, with a queer crinkled glass shade, made the room seem even drearier. An ideal situation to write about loneliness! Dora found it so. She went back
mrouBu ner aiary. in ner moiners; "Who" I wa lit'lp snn t low. enclosine two cents in stamns
irregular hand she found such entries: -th made-up children, from books I'd for return postage. Write your name
rtaa. why can i I Jive now wni aiaat-, and address clearly.
Years later she added to this page, in small writing to get it in. "I have tried this, and it is success
ful. Philosophers say there is little
Mrs. Elbert Huffman and family spent Sunday afternoon with Mr. and Mrs. James Kuth of New Paris, Ohio Mrs. Harold House assisted Mrs. Mack
Cohee with her threshing work Mon-j day Mr. and Mrs. John O r ana. son Myron and Mr. and Mrs. James)
Bechtol and daughter Lucile. were
guests Sunday evening of Mr. and
Mrs. James Orr and son Paul of Fairhaven Mr. and Mrs. Orla Dwireand
bert Huffman and family spent Thursday with Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Mann ol Eaton Miss Marie Neanover is spending a few days with her cousin. Miss Helen Kerlin of Chester, Indiana, Mr. and Mrs. Mack Cohee attend ed the funeral of Mr. Cohee's uncle, Hersh McKinstry of Columbus Mr.
thoughts about their friends, and their Jtion. Our Washington Information Bu- ana Ms- Jonn rr and 60n Myron doings, I must fill mine with thoughts I reau wUl seCure a copy for any reader f?ent Sunday, with Mr. and Mrs. Isaac
about imaginary friends. ' who fills out and mail the counon he-i Morrow oi Camden, Ohio Stanley
fore. I found it out today when 1 1 meat is almost endless.
went for a walk to the top or kjiod Directions for intelligent marketHill, and sat looking into the deserted jlng an1 recjpes for tne attractive prestone quarry and the hill where they've : par.ti0n of fnexpensive meat dishes cut the trees, leaving only the stumps. jfor every day are given in a booklet I'm not the sort that makes friends, so issued by the' Department of AgriculI must go through life very much alone. ture
Other people fill their manas wnn This is a free Government publica-
"Jan, 12th. Pan has learned three
new words this week. But she is slow in talking. She is so bright and so like her father I hope this isn't a bad Bign." "Feb. 6th. Jim went off today. He'll
be a hobo now for months until Peter distinction between the world of real-
is ready for spring plowing. I criedljty the world of the mind.. Does .ll day, after he left." I Gladys see the same table I see? Does
There was no entry until late March, u exist when we shut our eyes? The
whole world seems unreal to me sometimes when I have my eyes open. What happens when I shut them? I
(Do not send the coupon to The Palladium. Mall It direct to Washington D. C.)
one. My people are so much nicer than other real ones that I meet. Why not makeup ideal friends the ideal man and the ideal woman?" She had tried this successfully for a long time now. She wondered whether she would ever meet real people as satisfying. Tomorrow Mortor Calls Again
Beauty Chats By Edna Kent Forbes
tmnj! "f k
am
Jim was back then, for it said: "He looks well again. He can not stand the cold weather, nor Maude's and my
ragging. He always must be free toiuke my inward world, my imaginary
ao as ne wants. This was the most personal entry. The othejr items seemed to be dates of births, a list of presents a cousin received when she married, and other trivialities. When Pan was six, the entries stopped. Her mother had always called her Pan. But Aunt Maude disamoroved of
what she termed 'a downright heathen name" and called the child Dora instead. And Dora she remained always. Her mother had been a slender little woman with a heavy mass of straight brown hair which she wore parted in the center and bound in thick braids around her head; or else made into a great knot at the nape of her neck and held with a coarse net. She had brown eyes that seemed much too large for hpr slender face they almost stared
from it perhaps emphasized by the pallor of her skin and the slight prominence of her cheek bones. She died when Dora was six. Intermittently they had all lived with Peter, and worked for him. Jim for a time tried to stay at home and be mother and father too. He stuck it out three winters. Then the wanderlust seized him so strongly that he went off for a year. He shipped on a cattle boat, got to France, wandered into Italy, recrossed France, tried to live in Germany and fled from the efficient organization of that country his own easy going, inefficient nature too depressed by it Then he got into England where he made his way from town to town on a broken down bicycle, earning money by whistling popular songs in pubs and music halls. He came back and settled down again, aiid whenever he made off it was only for the cold part of the winter, when he tramped the warm southern states and made his way into Mexico. Naturally, such incomprehensible behavior on his part brought, first disapproval, then the conclusion that he was slightly "cracked" but harmless. Dora went through school, graduated, and in her turn, settled as poor relation and servant with her uncle and aunt. One winter Jim had taken her with him. And that experience had been
the pleasantest that ever happened to
her.
That winter there was no entry in
her part of the diary.
Father is like the Beloved Vagabond," she wrote once after reading
Locke s novel. "If I had been a boy, I might have gone with him often. If I had been a boy, I might have gone out to earn my living in some other way than this. Of course, girls leave
Washington, D. C. Frederic J. Haskin. Director, The Richmond Palladium Information Bureau, I enclose herewith two cents in stamps for return postage on a free copy of the Meat Booklet.
Weidner of near Eaton spent Saturday
and Sunday with Pearl Cohee Mrs.
Frank Geis of near West Alexandria
ana Mrs. Herman McGee of near
Eaton assisted Mrs. Paul Gei with
her threshing work Saturday Mack
Cohee visited his son Harry Cohee of Baltimore, one day last week Miss
Lidy McGee is visiting her fcister,
Mrs. Paul Geis this week Mrs.
Robert Neanover and family spenti
Wins Bread Prize
I V V.A . Js4
2 i v?i 'm
. ; H
I . ! ! John Stout i
i
I
their mother, Mrs. Sarah Clark , Mrs. Gordon Kays and baby son spent Monday evening -with Omar Miller and family Mrs Charles. Shafer .-n-:! chifdren of near Bath, and Mrs.. Meeker of Venice, spent Tuesday with Mr. and Mrs. Charles Roberts Mrs. Ginter, Mrs. Pearson and daughter, and Mrs. llobinson were guests Sun day afternoon of Mrs. Gordon Kay... ..Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Williamson and children spent Monday evening with Mr. and Mr.s John Benner, of College Corner. Ohio Mrs. Robert Conner
and daughter, Elizabeth, spent Monday eveninsr with Kavstnaueh Robinson and family Mrs. Kavanaugh tiobinscn left Tuesday moiTurg tcr
Blcomin?ton, 111., for a visit with h"r
iister Mrs. PeiirFon and familv..
Mr. and Mrs. Omar Miller weie in Liberty, Tuesday afternoon.. .Mr. ad; Mrs. Clarence Sanford of Richmond ' spent Monday with Mr. and Mr?.. George Shiikey Mrs. Lynch and daughters assisted Mrs. Een Hyd: 1
in cooking for threshers Tuesday "
Robert Toole and f .jndly called on, Mr. : and Mrs. George Keelor Monday evening Mrs. Alice Logue came Tuesday afternoon for a few days' visit with Omar Millar and family Mr.. ' Walter Dougherty entertained her Sunday school class at her heme hero Tuesday afternoon.. .. .Mrs. Lawson Sanford and daughter, Beverly, spent Tuesday with Harrv Sanford and family Miss Fay lionng is rpen-Jtng this week in Richmond.
John Stout is shown here with the silver trophy cud won by the baking
Thursday with Mrs. Sarah Neanover jA te stout learned his trade with A T ri TQ YYI 1 I XT fT tlnno o n-i A .r f n m A , . .
Mr. xtVoT Dvear Camd!nv.-' VMrl?na i the old Bayer Baking company of this
i.no. luav-a VjUUCC V1B11CU 1115 UiUtKCl, I :. i
I city, later moving his family to the
N'ame
Street
City
! State
r. . I
i Mr. ana airs, waiter Cohee of nean t- vritii oil
Eaton, Ohio Mrs. Elbert Huffman fha t.e - t. Ane-eles fnr the
daughter Edna, Mrs. Leonard i hst lnaf nf hrpa(i. gtfufs crew won
baby Maxine, and Anna tnp nH,p, His mother. Mrs. Anna
D out of
He also has two sisters
and
Foutz and
Neanover and Lawrence Neanover as- stnt Uvea on rural route 1
bisiea Mrs. nooert rs'eanover witn ner .Richmond.
-. - t ; f&A -; ' ,t, '. j p- '
suggestion to have all your summer
j cosmetics bleaching. For instance,
use a cleansing tutuuioti ucam ui
cleansing cucumber lotion, or use the honey-almond lotion when the skin is
too dry from exposure to wind ana sun. Use a bleaching soap, preferably oatmeal. In spite of all these precautions you may tan, but not to such an annoying extent.
Patience: You can reduce the ex
cess fat over your shoulders through exercising. .If you can play tennis or
row a boat you will be able to accomplish this. The fat will be consumed
and the muscles made firm.
Dimples: The juice from cucum
bers will bleach the skin after a sim
ple case of tanning. If a 'stronger
bleach is needed make an extract
from the cucumbers. To do this you cut the vegetable into small pieces, cover with -water and stew gently until all becomes a pulp. Strain this mat
ter through a fine white cloth. If the
extract is to be kept for any length of
time, either alcohol or some other
preservative will have to be added to it. At this season it is best to make it fresh, whenever needed. Make the year's supply at the end of the season when cucumbers are plentiful. All Inquiries addressed to Mrs. Forbes In care of the "Beauty Chats" department will be answered in these columns in their turn. This requires con
siderable time, however, owing to the great number received. So. if a personal or quick-r reply is desired, a stamped and self-addressed envelope must be
enciusea wun ma question. i he Kdi-tor.
threshing work Monday and Wednes
day. . . .The Salem reunion will Le held in the Pat Guckian grove Sunday July 30 Miss Mabel Flory visited her sister, Mrs. Homer Cupp, last week... Mr. and Mrs. Herman Potterf and daughter Mary Kathryn, have gone for a two weeks' trip through West Virginia, Maryland, Baltimore and Pennsylvania. They are motoring through
and two brothers.
The war debt in gold francs, owed by France to the United States, amounts to 13,750,000,000, and to Great Britain, 12,500,000. Btmmimumimmiiuiumintimiunniimi.immMmtiirtminummimimmmi
Vigran's Ladies' Shop Specials that save you Dollars i s 923 MAIN ST. I 3 .i:iiU!iiniimHntinimiuiMmimntiMuiiiiHiumiiiiiifiniiiufNiminiimtiimn
fi
COTTAGE GROVE Ind. Mrs. Omar Miller and daughter, Verda. entertained with a birthday dinner in honor of Omar Miller and Mrs. Ida Toole at the home of Omar Miller Sunday. Thirty people were present, including Mr. and Mrs. Edna Bates and sons, Edgar, Jr. and Robert, of Connersville, Ind.; Mr. and Mrs. Charles Ridenour and Mrs. Roy Reigle and children, of Richmond ; Mr. and Mrs. Everett Mil-
ler and son, Clifford, of Oxford, Ohio;
Mr. and Mrs. Cam Miller and Beverly Miller, of Liberty, Ind., Mr. and Mrs. Robert Toole and sons, Myron and
Cloyd. and Mr. and Mrs. Edward Williamson and daughters, Cleo and Freda, of this place Mrs. Pearson and daughter, of Bloomington, Ill.., Mrs.
Ginter, of College Hill, Ky., and John Hisle of Richmond, Ky., spent the
week end with Mr. and Mrs. Kava-
naugh Robinson Mrs. Ilda Toole and children spnt Monday with Mrs.
Zolla Williamson Mr. and Mrs. Ed
ward Hyde spent Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs. Ben Hide... Mrs Ilda Toole and sons and Mrs. Cora Bates and sons
Heart Problems
Dear Mrs. Thompson: I have two scars which were caused by boils. Can you please tell me something that will remove them? BLUE EYES. Scars will often disappear with
time, but if yours prove obstinate, ing off before it hardens into jars
make a lotion of sixty grains of boric; Such a cream is not only cleansing acid and eight ounces of witch hazel,) but helps to keep the skin soft and and see if this has any effect. Mas-'helps prevent sunburn.
sage win a:a consiaeraDiy Dy passing) Lettuce creams, cucumber creams
Cleansing cream Is best for summer
A thick greasy cream is too heavy
for hot weather and should only be used now if the complexion is very
dry, or if . deep wrinkles are being
treated. If the cold cream is too heavy it woud make the skin perspire in hot weather and irritate it. The best general cream for summer weather is an ordinary cleansinr cream made from white mineral oi' My formula is: White wax 1 ounce Spermaceti 1 ounce Almond oil ounce White mineral oil 4V2 ounces Rose water 1 ounces Eorax 30 grains Oil of bitter almond 15 drops This is made in the usual way by heating the oils, wax and spermaceti together until blended, adding the slightly warmed rosewater and borax,
beating the whole as it cools and pour-
Suburban
HAWTHORNE. Ohio. Mr. and Mrs
Robert Neanover. and family were the
guests Sunday of her sister, Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Kerlin and daughter, Helen, of Chester, Indiana Mr. and
were greeting relatives in Liberty, Sr.iurday afternoon Miss Verda Miller spent Friday evening with Robert Toole and family Edward Williamson and family spent Saturday evening with Omar Miller and familv. Miss Helen Higgins, of Muncie, Ind., spent the w ek end with .ome fo'ks. Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Johnson, of Richmond, :-pent the week end with home folks... Mr. and Mrs. Ivcn Gardner, of Richmond, spent Sunlay evening with Mr. and Mrs. Sam Caldwell. Mi. and Mrs. Frank Hammerle j.r.d children and Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Gleason spsnt Sunday evening with Mrs. Gleason and daughter, Marie...
Omar Miller and family spent Sunday j evening with Mrs. Alice Logue Mr. and Mrp. Charles Bunis and Mis3 Wilder, of Price Hill. Ohio, called on Omar Miller and family Sunday afterr.oon Mr. and Mrs. John Holland
and Mr. and Mrs. Aaron Gardner left Monday morning for. Michigan, for a several weeks' vacation. Mr. and Mrs. Gardner wiil go to Detroit Minn., to visit their son, Herbert and son, before they return Mr. and Mrs. Roy Meyers and children, pent Suuday with Mr. and Mrs. Charles Meyers... Burt Clark and family of Milwaukee, Wis.. Joe Clark and Charles Clark, of Indianapolis, Ind., Pets Clark and family of Sheridan,' Ind. and George Clark and wife of Richmond, were heie Monday to attend the funeral of
tOISON IVY
To relieve itch and smart apply lightly do not rub in
V
V A. F0 Run
Ooer 17 Million Jan Uecd Yearly
of a scar. The electric needle would also re move scars of the nature of yours.
and loitions are excellent for summertime use: Honey almond lotion, which is more difficult to make, is cooling, soothing, bleaching and good
Dear Mrs. Thompron: I am a dark-ifor the complexion with a tendency to haired, hrown-eved srirl of seventeen. i early wrinkles. It is not cleansing,
and I am large for my age. I am hope-! however, and should "be used after the ;
Ir-ssly in love with a dark-haired boyice ms Deen oainea, not Deiore as a
o mv asp. and he is very nice and re-: UMU;"us i-ieam
Be sure to take advantage of Price Reductions on oar Footwear
This Week Beckman & Kreimeier 708 Main St.
spec table. My father objects to my keeping company with him. I have no mother. Please give me information. BROWN EYES. Your father probably thinks you are too young to be "hopelessly" in love and therefore he objects to your going with the young man. As a matter of fact you are too young to think so much about love. At your age, however, I consider it all right for a girl to have occasional callers.
Unless you like sunburn it is a good
Cuticura Soap Clears the Skin and Keeps it Clear Soap. Ointment. Tslron. 25c eerywhre Samples :re of Ctlcr Lkiori Jon, twpt. X, Ma1Jb. Uua.
My Dear Mrs. Thompson: I "am a girl fourteen years of age and will be fifteen in August, I was weighed the other day and I weighed one hundred twenty-nine pounds. Can you suggest a way I could reduce without dieting?
Do you think it would be all right!
for me to dye my hair as it is a very; ugly shade of yellow. I am going to Chicago in a few weeks. What clothes would be suitable to take -A READER. Proper exercise will help reduce weight. Do not dye your hair, as you do not state how long you will be in Chicago, it is difficult to answer your question. IRliliraimininuinaHiiultuinntniinmiiitaiiiiiHiliyiuiiiinHtintnliitwtmiin 1 Special attention given to the treat-1 1 raent of stomach, intestines and the 1 1 nervous system. Electric light and I shower baths. ! E. P. WEIST, M. D. J 1 204 K. of P. Bldg.. Phone 1728 miiuumiiiwiuuuuiunuiuw"'uiiuiiiiiiiimiuniMiiim
OIL STOVE WICKS
Any Make, at WELDON'S Formerly Reed Furniture Co.
D
iEAFNESS is a rneak thief: it comes stealth
ily, destroying little by little until 40 per
cent of your hearing is gone before you discover it. Don't allow it to go on. Arrest the thief with Leonard Ear Oil. The treatment is simple and agreeable. Just "Insert it in the nostrils", and "Rub gently behind the ears." It not only arrests the disease in its early stages but relieves deafness and head noises no matter how long it has been progressing. Thousands, in all stages, are relieved every year. A. O. LEONARD, Inc. ?0 Fifth Ave.. New York. N. Y.
Descriptive Circular and Testimonials Sent on Request.
Forget Hard-water Worries Cleanse Your Hair With Cleero Only Thirty Minutes No Rinsing, No Soap The Only Thorough, Scientific Way Forget all worries about washing your hair in hard water when you use the new, wonderful shampoo, Cleero. In fact, forget all about old -fashioned methods of cleansing the hair and scalp. Cleero, discovered by M. Dore, Europe's most celebrated hair specialist, makes drenching your head with water unnecessary. No rinsing necessary. It cleanses the hair and scalp thoroughly and leaves it fluffy, lustrous and full of sparkling color. And all dry in thirty minutes' time! Cleero, brought to this country six years ago by a Newport society woman, for her own use, and withheld from the general public, is now available to alL It contains the purest of vegetable oils oil of olive, oil of cocoanut glycerine, a famous emollient, and two harmless solvents of grease and dirt. Nothing about it to make the hair sticky or gummy or dulled after its use. Ask your druggist for a bottle of Cleero. Take it home try it once you'll never go back to the old-fashioned, "catch-cold" way of shampooing your hair with soap and rinsings. 50-cent and SI bottles. Or send 10 cents in stamps for two trial shampoos. Distributed in the U. S. A. by Fairfield and Co., Inc., Wrigley Bldg., Chicago
Qor.Shampooing'WittiQut Hinging
f JLJkSfe 1 Testimonials i
1 Druggists. 3 SLW Q 3 Sent on H
1 XmyJ Request I 8 ,!!S!i,2iqi 1 1 1 1 1 .I
MAKE YOUR OWN FAVORITE SUNDAE
DON'T FORGET Phone 1236 when you need Plumbing, Heating and Lighting. Our Knowledge of your needs and our experienced workmen enable us to serve you right. WM. MEERHOFF 9 S. 9th
For Better Pastry We Recommend
FAULTLESS FLOUR
Include a sack with your next order
H. NIEWOEHNER South Fifth and E Streets
DOUBLE VALUE SALE Now Going On GEORGE E. KLUTE CO. 925 Main Street
THURSDAY SPECIAL Watch for Our Special Every Day
RYE BREAD l ib. loaf
6c
New System Bakery
With fruits so plentiful right now, you can serve Bender's Pure Ice Cream at each evening meal and still have a different dessert each time. Bender's is doubly delicious served with fresh fruits, such as Peaches, Raspberries, Bananas, etc. Phone 1188 for
Adorn Your Table With a New
Honeymoon or Breakfast Set
Cream
In various shades of lustre
1 "! ' 9
The Reputation of Our
Store is Built on Honest Values Fairly Priced Genuine Walnut Bedroom Suits, $75, $S9, $9S, up to $269. Walnut-finish 8-piece Dining Room Suites, $98, $225. Duning's Special: Martha Washington Dinner Sets, only $9.75. Aluminum Water Pitchers, 89c.
White and Black trimmed DemiTasse Set, priced now
S6.50
COCOA SET in blue and white, blue trimmed or white and orange trim- flrr ff med; this set at D UU HONEYMOON BREAKFAST SETS consist
ing of 6 plates, 6 cups and saucers, 1 sugar, 1 creamer and 1 pot, in blue, yellow and
white, trimmed in blue Priced special
S12.50
See These in East Window
Jenkins & Co.
i
r
o I i .i. 1 1 1 rWI j J III
'unm
726 Miln Street
rGRqENftyyyV)atchgs
WUd Rice Hominy Grits Chocolate-Covered Yeast Salt-Rising Bread Idaho Strained Honey Bran Cookies
Genuine Gluten Flour New Pure Maple Sugar Real Holland Cocoa Pure Bran Bread Imported Maccaroni Fresh Figs and Dates
b
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913 Main
