Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 43, Number 318, 20 November 1918 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

V THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND UN -TELEGRAM

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Mr. O. A. Hussert of Chicago, is visiting here this week. Mrs. Huseert was formerly Miss Pauline Smith. Miss Faith Pritchard of Marshall, 111., Is the guest of her sister, Mrs. B. P. Murphy, on South Fifteenth street Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Meredith of Montlcello, were guests of relatives here for a few days. Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Adams and family entertained a company of friends at dinner Sunday at their home on South Eighth street. Covers were laid for Miss Flora Commons of Piqua, O.. Orville Clark of Fountain City, Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Adams and daughter, Aline of Richmond. , The meeting of the Recreation circle which was to have met next Saturday with Mrs. Walter Farlow, ' has been postponed. ' Carl McClure, Waldo Bristol, William Colter and Herschell Spencer spent Sunday in Piqua, O. Women of First Methodist church have called off their market which was to have been held next Saturday. The Aid society of North A street Friends church will not meet until further notice is given. The Hiawatha Social club will not meet November 29 providing the ban on public gatherings is not lifted by that time.Mr. and Mrs. George E. Green of Rushville, Mr. and Mrs. F. Curtis Green and three children of Norfolk, Va., came today for a visit with Mr3. James H. Sharp at her home on Nortn Fourteenth street. The aid society of East Main street Friends' church will not meet until further notice is given. Harry Foley, who atends Butler college, Is here on a short visit with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Foley. Miss Esther Coate, daughter of Mr, and Mrs. J. M. Coate, and Sergeant Robert Carvey, son of Mrs. Harry Needham, were married this morning at the home of the bride's parents in Reeveston. Rev. J. J. Rae of First Presbyterian church officiated at the wedding. Sergeant and Mrs. Carvey left after the ceremony for a short wedding trip to Chicago. The new food club which was to have met with Mrs. Theodore Mc Cle!lan has been postponed. The meeting of Earlham Heights Dorcas society has been indefinitely postponed. ...

Service Men to Get Work From Shipping Board (By Associated Press) PHILADELPHIA, Pa., Nov. 20 Fartially disabled soldiers and other service men will be employed to fill vacancies in the emergency fleet corporation, according to Charles Piez, vice president and general manager of the corporation. "Wherever it is possible," said Mr. Piez, "we will fill places with partially disabled "soldiers and service men as the vacancies occur. Many of them are excellent mechanics and would fill places in the yards first rate. Of course," all depends upon the state of the disability and the mental equipment of the soldier. It ought not to be at all difficult to work out a plan to find profitable employment for these men in all the shipyards of the country."

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FOR HIS WIFE'8"KIN. j for her children directly, she would Edith threw her arms about her I have subjected him even to the hurt

husband. "John!", she criea, witn a

catch in her voice. "now, can you say such a thing! You know I do not accuse you. You know that I am really proud of you! There's nobody in the world who tries harder, works harder, is so dear and good to his family. When did I ever utter a word of reproach to you?" , " Her husband gently freed himself. "Your actions reproach me!" he said with quiet bitterness. ' "The fact that they reproach me before all my neighbors; before business associates like Mulry, before the ywhole world all this is the least of it- It is the fact that you wake my own doubts of myself that matters so much. Every man has devils of doubt in himself to fight It's all he can do to down them. He looks to those who love him to buck up his faith in himself. But when I see you threshing about, trying anything, everything to make a little money, then I know that I have fallen down on the most important Job in life the support of my family!" Edith ached for him. Yet she was ever conscious of her own hard problem. " . "Dear," she said pleadingly, 'you must believe me when I say you have nothing to reproach yourself with. And when I say that, I mean it from the bottom of my heart!" Ferrol did not speak for a time. "You may think I have nothing to reproach myself with," he said. "And I do try to hide the thought from myself that I fall short as a provider" "John, you don't!" Edith exclaimed yet with fainting heart. "Well, you certainly make it hard for me to believe it!" he concluded. Edith sat down by his side. "Listen, dear," she said firmly. "Let us be perfectly honest in this matter. Let's think with our own minds, not with others. John, forget for the moment what the world thinks of a wife's trying to earn money. Suppose I had a profession at which I could make money in my spare time. In my spare time, remember, not working away somewhere, for it would be a different matter if I neglected my duties to do it. Do you mean to say it would be a reflection on you if I used that spare time to make money? It's the same with Jackie. There seems a chance for our little son to earn some money in an interesting way at the moving picture studio remember, if I saw the slightest shadow of harm to him through it I'd , die before I would subject him to it. Do you really think it is a reflection on you as a man or a provider if we take advantage of this chance for extra money? John, look at the matter honestly. Is there any sense, any logic, in taking this matter the way you do?"

She pleaded with him, argued, rea

soned all to no avail. Her husband only listened, as far removed from her by bis silence as though he had left her alone in the room. When she could no longer be denied a reply he rose heavily and spoke in a weary voice: "You may be right, Edith, In what you 6ay. But not all the right and logic in this world can change my feeling on this matter of little Jack. So suppose we go in to dinner." Between John Ferrol and his wife there existed the truly dignified, the only worthy relation between human beings the relation of equality of right. Where a husband is the autocrat and overrules the wife; where a wife is the tyrant and dominates the husband, there the marriage is not a mating but a surfdom. When John Ferrol and his wife came to a deadlock each usually left the settlement of the dispute to the conscience of the other. Edith felt she was at least partly right in her view of the matter. - Yet she felt still more keenly that, as John had said, it was not mere right or logic that made him feel the genuine humiliation he revealed. Had her present urgent need of money been

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of wounded pride for their sake. But

to make him suffer for, the sake of any one but his children especially for. one to whom he owed nothing except as a kinsman of her Edith's conscience decided the matter more firmly than if it had been John's command. She went into his room, found him changing for dinner, and with her cheek against his. murmured: "You're a foolish old boy to feel as you do but since you do feel so, we shan't do anything to hide the pride we feel in you! I see now. Jack, that it was at least bad taste in me to have taken the kiddies to the studio. It was a bit of madness, I guess. Forgive it, dear?" . And Edith went back silently to her old problem of money money Oh, for a little actual money of her own! . (To be continued.)

29 QUESTIONNAIRES

STILL UURETURNED Twenty-nine persons have not returned their questionnaires to the conscription board. They are -requested to do so without filling them out If they are not returned the persons not returning them are delinquents. Those who have not sent in their questionnaires are: Grant Spears, Arthur M. Watson, Jerome C. Wiley, Burl Costin, Charlie Rodgers, Harry Lon Walls, George Albert Davis, Adolph Sittloh, Joseph A. Morat, George H. Baker, Gabor Kunz, Earl B. Huntington, William H. Bonner, Charles Leo White, John Philip Hinsky, John William Cornelison, James B. Burns, John H. Mervin, George Joseph, Lynch, Frank Huffman, George H. Richardson, Oliver J. Dotson, Paris D.Odell, Ralph Parno, David E. Roberts, Harry Leong, Charles J. Davis, Ernest Omer Ewan, John Norungolo.

DANDRUFF SOON RUINS THE HAIR

SEEK LOCATION FOR FLU HOSPITAL; 30 MORE CASES

Plans for using the Army training camp for a temporary influenza hospital were given up this morning, and the committee is looking for a house In the city where the cases can be taken care of. Ben Bartel, chairman of the committee, said that there were several houses in view. . but no decision had been reached. The committee to look after the hospital is composed of Ben Bartel, chairman; W. H. Romey, John Peltz, Mayor Zimmerman, Dr. . T. H. Davis, Mrs. John H. Johnson, chairman of Home Service, Miss Green, secretary of Home Service, Miss Flannagan. assistant secretary of the Commercial club. 'The situation is not at all alarming," Dr. T. Henry Davis, City Health Officer, said today. . - Thirty new cases were reported today to- County Health Officer Bulla, and about 21 of these were from the city. ' Miss Clara Pound, superintendent of the Reid Memorial hospital, reported to the committee that she had secured the services of a head nurse for the emergency hospital and also she will furnish some bed linen and rubber sheeting and some other necessary equipment. Captain Roberts of the Training Detachment will furnish cots, mattresses and blankets. Many nurses will probably volunteer their services. The chairman of the Red Cross has issued orders that all people entering the Red Cross rooms to work must wear an influenza mask. It is suggested that all persons entering business houses wear them. Directions for making the masks -can be secured at the Red Cross headquarters. The official order issued by Dr. J. M. Bulla, health commissioner of the county, follows: "Owing to the prevalence of influenza and for the purpose of preventing the spread of said disease and other contagious diseases, th? following orders are made by the under-

Girls If you want plenty of thick, beautiful, glossy, silky hair, do by all means- get rid of dandruff, for it will starve your hair and ruin it if you don't. It doesn't do much good to try to brush or wash it out. The only sure way to get rid of dandruff is to dissolve it then you destroy it entirely. To do this, get about four ounces of ordinary liquid arv'on; apply It at night when retiring; use enough to moisten the scalp and rub it in gently with the finger tipsy By morning, most if not all, of your dandruff will be gone,, and three or four more applications will completely dissolve and entirely destroy every single sign and trace of it. You will find, too, that all itching and digging of the scalp will stop, and your hair will look and feel a hundred times better. You can ge't liquid arvon at any drug store. It is inexpensive and four ounces is all you

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druff you have.' This simple remedy never fails. Adv. -

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signed. Dr. J. M. Bulla, county health commissioner of Wayne county, Ind.: 1. AH the churches, schools, picture shows, theaters, lodgerooms, club rooms and all public meeting places where people congregate shall be closed from and after the 18th day of November, 1918, until the 1st day of December, 1918, at 12 o'clock midnight and no person shall be permitted to congregate at any of such places. "2. All pool rooms, - card rooms, bowling rooms and other such places of amusement shall be closed to business and no persons shall be permitted to loiter in or about same from and after the 18th day of November, 1918, until the 1st day of December, 1918, at 12 o'clock midnight "3. No public sales shall be held within doors from and after the 18th day of November, 1918, until the 1st day of December, 1918, at 12 o'clock midnight. "4. No person, firm or corporation shall permit people to congregate or loiter in or about their place of business from and after the 18th day of November, 1918, until the 1st day of December, 1918, at 12 o'clock midnight, under the penalty of being entirely closed to business ; provided nothing herein shall be construed to apply to employes nor to the expeditious transaction of business without permitting people to congregate or loiter nor to the usual transaction of business of restaurants or public dining rooms." Steamship Line Opened Between Japan and Soath . (By Associated Press) NEW ORLEANS, La., Nov.J$. The Pausha Maru, an 8,200-ton steamer of the Osaka Shoshen Kaisha, one of the largest Japanese steamship companies, arrived at this port last night, marking the beginning of actual service on the first regular steamship line ever operated between New Orleans and Japan. The vessel brought a cargo of coffee from Brazil and on its return trip through the Panama canal will carry a cargo of machinery and merchandise for Japan.

A ustria Finds Difficulty in Raising War Loan (By Associated Press.) BASEL, Switzerland, Nov. 20. Announcement is made at Vienna, by the council of state, that it has been decided to raise the new Austrian loan from : "new sources of revenue," because of the financial situation.

The American Red Cross numbers 20.000 American Indians among its members.

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parate Pieces lv bed and flat fleece $1 .25 Each

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