Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 43, Number 339, 14 December 1918 — Page 5
PAGE FIVE BRINGING UP FATHER By McManus Building Up the System After an Attack of Flu -:- I HO TO THft SO TO LOOK M THE PROPERTY-
:IIE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM SATURDAY, DEC, 14, 1918.
j) 7 tmE rKE OE POOK 1 no-, vnll DO nuRN I'M ' T "TT vELL i ' went 1 I what AND HE roOLD HE -oniP , ,vr. cZZL CRAZT TO KNOW " . J .WHJ TOLO OO XOU
NEA H.S EWATF wmt VV" -WHFRF .T .S ' C I FQUS J fSA,l : "E ' ON'T MEAN? 1
" - l " . ; . ; I
1
Heart OTome 1 MR. ELIZABETH THOMPSON
Dear Mrs.' Thomson: I am a girl nineteen years old and went a few times with a boy before he had to go to war. I have known this boy all my life and love him very much and he has told . me he loves me. He ba3 been over there a year now and I have written to him all the time. He Bays In almost every letter he loves me and I believe he dees. I would not go with any other boy if I knew he would not want me to, but he has never paid anything about it to me. Do you think it would be all right if I would write and ask him if he cared if I did go? Would it be rushing things a little on my part? Should he speak first? I urely do not want to do anything to hurt him and I am willing to do anything I can for him. TWILIGHT. You have not known the boy lon enough to be sure of your love for him cr his for you. Love is so serious a matter that aboy should not speak of it unless he asks a girl to become engaged at the same time. In case you are not engaged you are free to to go with ether bays. I can see your position and realize that you do not want to offend the boy you love. At the same time you must protect yourself again the possibility of his ceasing to love you when he returns. It is not necessary to write and ask permission.
. I have a Ford runabout at my liberty. Would it be'' proper for me to take a drive and get him and bring him to my home or go to shows in it with him? He sometimes asks if I love him since he has failed. How can 1 prove this? ANXIOUS ELVY. It will be perfectly proper to call for him in your machine. It is not necessary to tell him repeatedly that you love him in spite of his failure. Do not talk about the matter. The fact that you remain true to him will be proof enough of your love.
Dear Mrs. Thompson: I have gone with a young man four years. We had just begun to love each other dearly when by poor crops . he lost all his property, including a car. I never comes to see me any more, but writes love letters still, telling hie how be would love to see me.
Three Meals a Day
Three and only three meals a day are advocated by the ' United States Food administration. Here is a set which may be used on any cool day. Breakfast. Baked Winter Pears Calves' Liver and Bacon Tcast Coffee Lunch or Supper Cream of Tomato Soun Baked Eggs with Pimento Potatoes Coffee Jelly Dinner Roast Pork with Franconia Potatoes Gravy Apply Sauce Buttered Parsnips ', Lemon Pie
Cream of Tomato Soup One qnart milk. 1 slice onion. 4 tablesBpoona flour, 1 pint home canned lomatoes, 2 teaspoons su?ar, U teaMocn soda. 1 teaspoon salt, 2 tablespoons fat. Scald the milk with the onion, remove onion and thicken milk with flour diluted with cold water until thin enough to pour, being careful that the mixture is free from lumps; cook 20 minutes, stirring constantly at first. Cook tomatoes with sugar fifteen minutes, add soda, and rub through a sieve; combine mixtures, and strain into tureen over fat. salt and pepper. Baked Eggs With Pimiento Potatoes. Two cups riced potatoes. V-j cup skimmed or whole milk. 2 tablespoons fat, .1 teaspoon salt, 2 tablespoons chopped plmcntoes, 4 eggs. Mix the potatoes, milk. fat. salt and pimienloes together well, arrange in a greased baking dish; make four indentations, and into each break an egg. Dust with salt and pepper, sprinkle with crumbs, and bake until the eggs are set or longer if desired until the eggs are hard cooked.
RED GROSS WORKERS PET INSTRUCTIONS
Mrs. Charles Bond, city chairman. Red Cross Christmas roll call has given out the following instruction to workers: Workers should write the name and aldresa, giving street and number before tearing off the receipt, when a member is obtained. All workers must turn in their reports daily to their ward chairmen and early enough so that she can report to the city chairman- before 7:30 o'clock. Do not forget that your receipts for each day must be kept separate and must balance the report given to your ward chairman for that day. Remember that your work will not be finished until you have seen all adult persons in your territory and given them the opportunity to join the Red Cross. Give a white star only when every adult person living in the house has joined the Red Cross for 1919. Remember that the keynote of this Red Cross Christmas roll call Is universal membership which means the enrollment of every loyal American as a member of the greatest humanitarian organization in the world. Mrs. Paul Ross, the county chairman reports that the supplies and final instructions have .been sent out to the county chairmen and she asks them again to remember to write the name and exact mailing address before tearing off the receipt, when a member is obtained. The numbers on the receipt books will indicate the section where the work is done and the workers will get full credit for all members enrolled. The Roll Call headquarters in the old Jenkins building was arranged Friday. It has been decorated with posters, and the room is provided with tables, chairs, rugs, and a heating stove. Telephone number 1851 will be used. The headquarters will pen on Monday morning and remain open until the roll call is completed.
DIRECTED "THE GREAT LOVE
ISM U V V VjrKlhbllM -HSR
GARFIELD SCHOOL PAPER IS OUT
The Garfield school paper. "The Headlight,' put out its first edition of this year last week. The Headlight was organized about three years ago and has been going big ever since. Horace SipDle is this year's editor-in-chief, and Virginia Harris is assistant editor. The paper is for the pupils, according to one of the editorials, and the pupils are all expected to contribute. Another editorial suggests that War Savings Stamps be given as Christmas presents this year. The complete staff follows: Horace Sipple, editor-in-chief; Virginia Haris assistant; William Romey, news editor; Elizabeth Coate, assistant; Virginia Livingston, literary editor; Augusta Gennett, assistant; Keith Sharpe, advertising manager; Harry Gennett, assistant; William Marshall, business manager; Clara Mote, assistant; Russell Fansher, publication manager; Raymond Gentry, assistant.
DWOrarrrrH
Mrs. Cynthia Hunt Is Dead at Home Here Mrs. Cynthia E. Hunt, 82 years old, died at her home, 208 South Seventh street, this morning at J o'clock. She was born in Abington and was married to Newton S. Hunt in 1854. She is survived by four sons, Ellsworth, Frank, Eugene and Clarence, two daughters, Mrs. Florence J. Helms and Mrs. Rosamond N. Williams, twen-
Court Records
Decrease in Arrests Since Prohibition Records show a decided falling off in arrests for intoxication and other causes in Richmond since prohibition has been in effect. From April to November in 1917, Richmond had 718 arrests for all causes and 398 of these were drunks. From April to November in 1918, after prohibition became effective there were 456 arrests for all causes and 110 drunks. In the state of Indiana there has been a falling off of 9,838 arrests for all causes to 32 per cent, and 5,714 arrests for drunkeness or 66 per cent.
WORTH ATTEXTIOX OF WOMBS When you feel too tired to work, when dark puffs appear under your eyes, when you wake up weary, with backache or pains in sides and loins, when muscles and bones ache, when you suffer rheumatic ' twinges, when lumbago puts you down, then you know the kidneys are weakened or disordered. Mrs. T. J. Bucknell. Route 1. Hardy, Neb., writes: "I am recovering from an attack of lumbago, by the aid of Foley Kidney Pills. They surely have helped me." For sale by A. G. Luken & Co. Adv.
Appetite and Strength Restored By Nerv-Worth. Says This Grateful User. J. F, B&char, well known Lake Erie watchman of Fostoria, O., had been "dragging around for two weeks, to use his own words, trying to recover from an attack of influenza. In the following signed statement he told Glenn H. Eaton, Fostoria's Nerv-Worth druggist, what built him up: "Nerv-Worth was recommended to me by a friend. I had had the influenza and was feeling r-o weak and out of fix I could not work. My appetite was very poor. Nerv-Worth seems to be just the thing for my case as my appetite 13 good and I am gaining strength. "J. F. BACHAR, "927 E. Fremont St. Fostoria. O." The : Nerv-Worth demonstrator at Fostoria adds to the above Mr. Bachar's verbal statement that he took only half a bottle of Nerv-Worth to get such welcome results. Mr. Bachar further added that he began taking Nerv-Worth on a Saturday and by following Monday he was able to go to work. Nerv-Worth Demonstrator. J. G. England, who recently concluded a strikingly successful Nerv-Worth demonstration at Dayton, O., confirms the Fostoria testimony. He says not only that Nerv-Worth helped to rebuild numbers of those whom the influenza had knocked out in Dayton, but that among the many known to him as users of Nerv-Worth, not one took the disease. ' No one should go "dragging around' after an atack of weakening grippe when Nerv-Worth is available as an upbuilder. Thistlethwaite sells NervWorth in Richmond. Your dollar back if this famous family tonic does not benefit you. Ask demonstrator today for a sample dose. Adv.
Cora Suma was granted a divorce i
from David Suma in circuit court Saturday morning, on the grounds of abandonment. The defendant and plaintiff were married in March, 1911, and separated in November of the same year. The plaintiff said that the defendant wanted her to sell her farm and divide the proceeds. When she refused, he left her, she alleges.
ty-two grandchildren and twelve great
grandchildren and sister, Mrs. Harriet Dye, Wichita, Kansas. Mrs.' Hunt resided on a farm five miles south of the city until March, 1911, when she moved to Richmond. .' She was a member of the Elkhorn Baptist church from 1869 until the time of her death.. Funeral services will be held from the home, Tuesday morning at 10 o'clock, and at the Elkhorn church at 11 o'clock.
LAND TRANSFERS Nina Otis to Alfred C. Bateman, S. Northwest and northeast, section 2, township 17, range 13. .
Argentine women have won their right to all the professions, including engineering and law.
OLD
LmfDRl
TUESDAY, THURDAY, SATURDAY Good Music ! .-. t Good Time !
Coriander to Attend State Y. M. C. A. Meet General Secretary Lester Carlander of the Y. M. C. A., will go to Indianapolis next week to attend a state Y. M. C. A. conference called for December. 18. The conference has been called that the secretaries and other Y. M. C. A. men interestec" Tiay face some of the after war opportunities for association service. General secretaries representing all the associations of the state will attend the conference.
RIVER AT FLOOD STAGE
PETERSBURG, Ind.. Dec. 14 The Patoka river is nearing the flood stage and White river has risen seven feet in 24 hours and is rising an inch an hour.
AT THE MURRETTE THEATER
I
r-- ?'V --it-
gARMSHOFj .m'lOtKE
rv -..' ---.4 j
1
2 S
is beyond all doubt
The Player-Piano that is all but human Make this a Manualo Christmas. You can not make a better investment, and you can not find a better instrument in the world. The fact that the "Manualo" is found in the pianos built by the house of Baldwin namely, the Baldwin, the Ellington, the Hamilton, the Howard gives you a select choice of instruments and styles. Terms to suit.
Player Piano Rolls, Disc and Cylinder Phonograph Records and Regina Music Boxes Special Drug Prices for Saturday and Monday only
$1.75 S. S. S ,.......$1.43 $1.00. Panes Celery Comp... 70c $1.25 Wine of Cardui. . . . . . .93c $1.00 Mother's Friend: ..... .89c $1.25 Warner's Safe Rheumatic, for .93c $1.25 Warner's Safe Cure... 89c $1.50 Taft's Asthmaline. . . .98c $1.25 Moellers Norwegian Oil. 96c $1.50 Allen's Hair Restorer.. 98c $1.00 Ayers Hair Vigo. ... . .70c
$1.50 Kennedy's Medical Discovery .$1.16 35c Chamberlain'a Cough Cure. at .. V...24C 25c DeWitt's Cough Syrup.. 17c 25c Brown's Bronchial E!ixer.15c 30c Kemp's Balsam. .19c $1.00 Stuart's ; Dyspepsia Tablets at,; 79c 25c M'Lean's Tar Wine Lung Balm ....15c
Walterm
an
27 North Eighth Street
j I Au S lijiTi j,ihi'.!IIii-i au 'j LU'iK!ja-r-j? -.was S tuij i
ill
1
Our Christmas List Specialties ' Pleasing and Practical Gifts for a Joyful Christmas Silverware Community, Rodger Bros. 1847; Rogers & Bros., Table and Pocket Cuttery, Plain and Safty Razors, Scissors, Carvers and Butcher Knives, Sleds, Skates, Boys' Wagons, Air Rifles, Hunting Suits, Ingersoll Watches, Flash Lights, Tools of all kinds. Come in and fill your shopping gift lists.
Irvixi Red
Son
Main and Seventh Sts.
