Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 39, Number 51, 9 January 1914 — Page 8

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, FRIDAY, JAN. 9, 1914 Married Life the Third Year The Engagement Ring By Nell Brinkley

GE EIGHT

Y MABEL HERBERT URNER. Dear Helen: I am much worried at your last letter. I hardly know how to advise you. As you know, I have never wanted to Interfere in any way between you and your husband or his people. And there are some problems, that every wife must work out for herself? About his mother I hesitate to speak. I can understand your resentment at. the letter she wrote Warren, but I am sure, dear, that you wers wise in your attitude towards her the day she called. Whatever she might have said, was it quite polite for you to retaliate as you did? I know she goaded you into it, and it does seem that you should be free to rent your spare room if you wish. But it couldn't help matters for you to say you didn't think it concerned her, and that, the only interest she has ever shown had been to criticise. Of course, she exaggerated when she wrote Warren you were insolent to her, but, still, as she was calling at your home, I hardly think you should have said anything at that time. I know you feel you have taken a great deal and have said very little, and that ever since your marriage hie people have treated you with more or less discourtesy. But would it have helped any for you to be discourteous, too? At least, you have gotten along for these two years without an open break, and it seems time it would be better if you could avoid any just now. After all, your life is not lived with his people. You see them only occasionally. And whatever your plans for

the future it will not make them any easier to antagonize his mother. You write that you feel you cannot So on as things are now. That your dependence on Warren is becoming more and more intolerable and that you must tind some way of making at least part of your own expenses. Helen 1 don't know what to say about this. 1 have wanted to talk it over with your father, but have hesitated to do so. for you know how bitter he already is toward Warren. And I am sure he would insist on your coining home. However little we have you are always welcome to shar it. But you say you will never do this. And yet I wonder, if you realize how hard it is for any woman of your training to be self-supporting or even partlaliy so. Even if you were wholly free it would be most difficult. But. with Winifred have you thought of what a handicap she would be? You would never want to be separated from her, and yet that is what almost any work you might take up would mean. You write that many women whose husbands have died and who have had no more training for bread-winning than you. support themselves and children. That is true, and were you forced to do it, you probably could. But 1 cannot hear to think of your fac ing the hardships, anxieties and hu-j miliation that must surely come when ! a delicate woman who has always j been sheltered faces the world alone. I You ask me what. Sally Hewitt did after her husband was killed on the ! railroad. 1 don't know what she took up at first, but now she is in C'hiccago working for some fashion publication doing designing of some kind. But. of course, she always had a knack at drawing which you have not. How I wish you had kept up your music, for I feel you have a talent for that. But 1 suppose In New York it would be useless for any one with only a moderate training to try to give lessons. You speak of shorthand and as if I think you could learn that. I know so little about it, Helen, but even if you did learn is not the pay very small? And are there not many applicants for every position i And this work would take you out i in the business world. ou would prob-; ably have to be in some lawyer s of-j uce or mohei s ouict-, aiiu i khuw ..uw hard that would be for you. Don't minis- i m Trying to wchkc. you h you . are convinced that your happiness . lies in being independent. But I want von to realize more fully some of the difficulties. ! At least doti't do anything radical until Warren returns. Perhaps if he is successful in his husiness deal out ', West things may be better. A man is always more irritable when he is en-i gaged in any enterprise that is uncertain. It is hard to wait, for develop- ' ments. And I suppose that is what he is having to do. So, dear, of you can, be patient a little longer and try to think the future holds some happier solution than for you to have to work outside your home. About Mrs. .Morrison, your roomer. 1 hardlv know what to advise von. It does seem a little unreasonable tha-" ' you should not be free to rent the , spare room while Warren is away. ' And yet. since both he and his people ; are so against It, 1 am not sure that j you are wise in keeping her. J After all, it can only be a few weeks : until Warren returns, and is it worth j going against his wishes to keep her j for that short time? Halon. as I grow older 1 think I SEE IF THE CHILD'S TONGUE IS COATED If Cross, Feverish, Constipated, Give "California Syrup of Figs." look at the tongue, mother! If coated, it is a sure sign that your littk' one's stomach, liver and bowels need a gentle, thorough cleansing at once. When peevish, cross, listless, pale, doesn't sleep, doesn't eat or act naturally, or is feverish, stomach sour, breath bad: has stomach-ache, sore throat, diarrhoea, full of cold, give a teaspoonful of "California Syrup of Figs," and In a few hours all the foul constipated waste, undigested food and sour bile gently moves out of its little bowels without griping, and you have a well, playful child again. You needn't coax sick children to take this harmless 'fruit laxative;" they love its delicious taste, and it always makes them feel splendid. Ask your druggist for a 50 cent bottle of "California Syrup of Figs," which has directions for babies, children of all ages and for grown-ups plainly on the bottle. Beware of counterfeits sold here. To be sure you get the genuine, ask to see that it is made by "California Fig Syrup Company." Refuse any other kind with contempt. Adv.

And inside was engraved, inter'aiked with one another as the lovers wen marvel happened, when he put in th ohl, old plea, "I love you do you low- ni"' and their sweethearts opened their m mths and sang like everything.

grow more dependent. I haven't the courage that I once had. I can see th;u even in my housework. I 1ms spring we are going to have that door vv i through from the hall to the dining room. You know we have planned that J for several years. But, somehow, just j to get everything ready for the men ! seems to me such an effort. And 1 i even dread the housecleaning this I vear. And the cloth von sent me I Christmas for a suit- I haven't had it j made up yet, just because I dreaded j taking It ot the dressmaker's and planning it out. I am so afraid she will spoil it that I keep putting it off. Now, I know all this is just because I am growing old. So perhaps I should not let my fears influence you. You're young, and have most of your life bej fore you. And if you think that sooner or later you will have to make some radical change perhaps you had better make it now. For your sake, Helen, I wish that I was younger, so that you could lean upon me more. But this winter 1 feel that I have aged a great de;il. The rheumatism in my hand is worse, and at timPR it is nil thrmiph mv :irni nnrt shoulder. And this has been a hard winter on your father too; lu stnops more than r have ever seen him. and he is more feeb)e than wnoI1 V()1I wt,n. here last vear. So vol, (1(,ar wo are both getting old, and that is why j fio dreafi to fhjnk f)f vf)U wjthot all Vlo n-,tofi nf uuai,n,i n,i your home. Well, dear, I am afraid this is not a very cheerful letter or a very helpful one, and yet one that I felt I should write. I shall be anxious to hear from you. Write often, if only a few lines. Try to keep well, for, after ail, health is the greatest thing. And it will be easier for you to meet any conditions that may come up if you are well and strong. With much love to you and Winifred MOTHKK. Helen read this letter with the feeling that somehow her mother had failed her. She realized now how much she wanted to hold to her. But this letter only showed that she could not. 't n-ly made her feel that more than ever ehe stood alone. Again she read the passages where her mother said she was grow ing old that everything now seemed an undertaklng. It almost terrified her. Somehow she had never thought of her mother as ever growing really old. She had vaguely felt that she could never change, that age with its weakening influences would never claim her. And she had looked forward to this letter as one that would give her courage, and would strengthen her in her plans. Instead it had shattered wnat courage sne Had it had made her feel all her helplessness and ina bility And more than this her mother had ! questioned the wisdom of her attitude towards Warren's mother, and also her determination to keep the roomer. She took up her mother's letter and read it again. "Don't think I'm trying to weaken you if you are convinced that your happiness lies in being independent." And yet the letter had weakened her and her mother knew that it would. For the moment Helen had almost a fierce contempt for her own wavering indeciion. She thought of her many determinations which she had never carried out. No wonder Warren scoffed at her assertions of independence. Looking back on the last few months she realized that she had made one plan after another, and had carried out none of them. There came over her a feeling al most of fatalism that whenever she i tried to assert any vestige of independence, in sme way some influence always swept her back to the acceptance of conditions as they were. Was it always to be like this? Was she really the victim of some curious fatality. Or was it only because she had so long been underWarren's dom? inating, tyrannizing will that it had crushed out any real courage she had

I i

Religion of the

BY A. LAYMAN. And if ye shall despise my statutes, r if your soul (life) abhor my .judunieuts. so that ye will not do all my , commandements, but that ye break my . llTMflnt IvlAl'ltlni, oil r.? Viirtltl, H rctlll ft.vltriui.Ki till 1CLVVO 1 limfl II, j spiritual happiness and human eniciency), I will even appoint over you terror, consumption (tuberculosis), and the burning ague, that shall consume the eyes, and cause sorrow of the heart: And if ye will not be reformed by me by these things, but will walk contrary unto me; Then will I also walk contrary unto you, and will punish you (by all manner c .11... .1 v -. . , : i .1: x j oi disease aim .auunai uisasiei ) yei seven tunes tor your sins. Uevitlcus, 1H. 23, J4. Parenthesis added. How long, O Iord, how long yet will thy people refuse to learn thy inevitable chastisement for fearful violations of thy Divine laws, physical, and spiritual ! Go to Chicago, to New York, or even to Indianapolis, coming New Years niht; look on that fearful bacchanalian joy ride to hell and gone, on thou candid sound self-thinking one at all versed in history! Read the handwriting on the walls of those Belshazzer feasts-chambers! Then teil me; "Slinll there he evil in a city and the Lord hath not done it?'' To bring his people to a just, judgment. How many so-called "Christians" will contend that Clod has anything to do with earthquakes, fires, disease, war, and extensive disasters "by land ami by sea." today, as of old? Do you believe in God and his Christ? Do you believe all the Bible as Divine- inspiration of man revealing the will of God as to perfect rule and guide to faith and conduct of man j towards his fellow man? "Your tex1 simplv an obsolete Mosaic statut long ago fulfilled, no longer in force; j our 'exact sciences' take care of that today. God looks after only Sundav ; chun h matters now;" replys the de- i vout materialist orthodox churchman, j Utterly ignoring such pious hypo- j critical bosh; The religion of the Hu man triumvirate Body, which is the only true stepping-stone to the Spirit- ; ual gospel of "The Man of Galilee;" : wo will continue the study of food and Hetics. Refering to the excellent Book of Robert Hutchinson, M. D. ; Kdn., M. R. C. P. Published by Win. ' Wood & Co., N. Y.. the following dia- ; gramatic representations of the foodvalues of an Egg. a potato and the kernal of an English walnut, so-called is presented: Observe that the yolk of the egg is the most nutritious part, especially if cooked and eaten as intended it should; it has more proteid-tissue building material, and 31.6 of fat heat making food, while the white has none. A "soft cooked" egg with raw volk. cannot be permeated bv the di gestive fluids, consequently not becoming a real nutrient, and if not efficiently eliminated or cast out of th, body by the excretory organs, becomes a ptomain or alkaloid putrifactive poison. Eggs to be nutritious,

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s, the names of the put her face to his and sii should be thoroughly cooked, boiled, poached, s'Tanihl. -d or made into omelet with oatmeal flour and baked. Kggs should never be tried in lard or grease of anjkiud; when boiled an hour, the yolk meated by tin mealy and easily perigestive fluids. WATEB 9 Jr t $ PROTElDJi&J; STARCH Xf ATO-6 .V. has - TV The potato the primal ! h'l '-'e per- ( a tpical food, cod values; obiii. o: i''i;aTii7"d 'a it." Also the alues. fibre, niinract i ; besido - a v-ry valuable iue-h t do with ate, s r-honhl not with meat, and : easily digested soft maple chips d. no vegetable ai! t! :hiid o three 1! rri 1 m i:u p.i". a ( m '-ir food . ! Hi! el i'eod COP.sTi'lli lai build im; be fried, nor ; 1 1 d i pOt.T chins are ; IMS aand as - rif ;! liiccl in urease. Should he cooked . ad wil 1; uv- rise, nestiou ai;d s : ll-'ldd 1 i eeci. "jackets" on, or wii'.j ni at . for when t h y an -e a sad diidder rheumatism i r.b.tie, boded with !a ked ; one looking more good. to nal nutrition, than to "iaste ' will observe this Ibvine dietetic law. Sneaking of the popular error of cooking vegetables with meat, the traditional error from time immmemorial of pork and beans. The wife cooked beans v.iiii pork like mother did. and so on, tt the tini" to which no man's memory runneth. I 1 . i No. n. Ti e "English" walnut, though containing small percentage of organic fluid, has HI. ('''; of fat or heat making food. Y.'hiU' an excellent food value, should, like ether foods, be balanced to normal nutrition of the l'ly ; the squirrel knows better than man the food-value ot nuts, storing a winter supply which keeps him fat all winter. Nuts should be a winter food for man also. Should not be eaten in summer, never tat between

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Body

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man and his maid. And, too, there and whispered back, "I do love you."

meals, nor at any meal except dinner, 12 o'clock meal, then only after a moderate meal. Overfat persons should not eat nuts, while lean, cold blooded persons should eat heartily of them at the proper meal-time, chewing them most thoroughly. If people generally would only practice THE RELIGION OF THE BODY half as devotedly for the glory of God as the ancient Hebrew, ninetenths of the doping doctors would i snnn h out. nf natients Let us prav: "Father God in that tdortous kingdom so very near us even within us, of we will, will it so. I we thank thee with unutterable spir itual realization of they many mercieB manifest in these vital realms, these marvelous living bodies, in language that cannot be uttered In articulate words, for thy Omnipotent beneficial Wisdom, apparent in these food-values so wonderfully and fearfully adapted to all our necessary wants; thus sanctifying them to the physlclal nourishment and spiritual uplift of all life activities; we thank thee, Father, in the ntrae of Jesus Christ; amen." A clock which was presented to Northwestern university in Evanston, 1 111., stopped recently after thirty-four i years' constant running. After slight i repairs it was started and promises to I run as long again.

AFTER SICKNESS OR OPERATION

It U a pathetic mistake to accept drugs or alcoholic mixtures when nature craves nourishment to repair the wasted body and restore the vigor of health. For forty years the best physicians h-se relied on the wholesome predigested nourishment in SCO I I "S EMULSION which is totally free from alcohol or opiates. Scott's Emulsion sharpens the appetite renews blood nourishes nervnes strengthens bones and

restores the courage of health

Scott's Emulsion sets in action

the very forces

health. It nnritv.

richness and strength .1

has stood the test S of forty years. 1 3-1 25

Watch This Banner

was the day of the year that all this And with that, all the. little Dannys

SUES TO COLLECT FOR NOTES GIVEN FOR AUTOMOBILE EATON'. Ian. 0 . F. R. Christman has instituted suit in the common pleas court against Albert J. and Vallora Paullin and others to collect $1,245.50, which sum is represented by i three notes aiven in payment for an automobile. He asks Interest from Au gust v ot last year. The defendants reside on their farm south of Sugar Valley. Sore Throat Don'ts. When the children have sore throat, don't blister their necks with lamp oiL Don't torture them with a foul smeJlintj piece of fat meat, wrapped about the neck. Don't imagine there is medical virtue in an old sock or piece of red flannel. Don't believe in antiquated superstitions. A. sore throat is a serious matter and is not to be healed by such make-believe remedies. The use of such methods is simply putting the patient to need- yiF pa tnrtiirp. Ise a liti!" Bore throat T vrisdom and give them TONSILINE and the throat will heal quickly. 25 cents and 30 cents. Ilo?pital Bize ?1.00. All Druggists. to make life bright. that promote L1

l 4k. 3 927' - Main St.

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tTAr? r . - 1 .TZ&. , ' Cures Golds Bronchitis, Asthma, all throat and lung troubles No alcohol or dangerous drug's. Guaranteed. D. E. Roberts Piano Tuner & Repairer Sixteen years ir. tbe profession. Estimates furnished for repairs. My Work Will Please You. Phone 368-J. SPACE FOR STORAGE OR MANUFACTURING PURPOSES We are equipped to handle all kinds of storage. Space with plenty of lljjht for manufacturing purposes. RICHMOND MFG. CO West Third and Chestnut Sts. Telephone 3210. For Correct G lasses jjo to MISS C.M.SWEITZER Optometrist. Phone 1099 THE BEST WAY To Begin The New Year Sit down and sum up your billa. putting those of the butcher, grocer. rnt man. insurance agent, rtc. all in one amount, then come and see us and give au oppon unity i explain our plan for r-:i.ving ot:r financial pains." IxKins en f irniturc. piano, teams, -' . in amounts from $5. U0 to ?!'.!'. At 2 per cent per Month f2r..0i) costs o,i $4.10 for three months. That's all. Wo hnve other plans if this does not suit you. WRITE OR PHONE US. Richmond Loan Co. PHONE 15-13 Colonial Iildg., Room 8 Richmond, Ind.

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