Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 43, Number 347, 24 December 1918 — Page 5

.THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM TUESDAY, DEC. 24, 1918.

PAGE F1V

12,003 JOIN THE RED CROSS

Final calculations of the Red CroBs Roll Call campaign made Monday night when the campaign closed, showed 12.003 for Wayne county. The quota was 30,000. The Roll Call headquarters will be open tonight and memberships may be taken out there at any time. Several booths remained open Tuesday.

The Victory Girls and the Boy

Scouts who campaigned the city Monday secured 73 members. Monday's report follows: City Mrs. C. S. Bond. Manager. First ward Mrs. George Reid... . 11 Second ward Mrs. George Cun: ningham ., 18 Third ward MrB. John H. Johnson 1 Fourth ward Miss Annette Edmunds 19 Fifth ward Mrs. A. W. Roach... 38 Sixth ward Mrs. Land and Mrs. Dill 22 Seventh ward Mrs. Fred Lahrman 42 Eighth ward Mrs. William Reed 6 156 Liberty Guards, and Boy Scouts.. 73 Factories 4 Roll Call headquarters 26 Booths 90 Total 1.373 Townships Mrs. Paul Ross, Manager. Hagerstown 131 Whitewater 175 Boston 284 Milton 28 Cambridge City 220 Dalton 14 Fountain City 22 Wayne township 151 1.025 Monday, Dec. 16 ( 2095 Tuesday 2286 Wednesday 2317 Thursday 1570 Friday 1362 Saturday 1000 Monday 1373 12,003

Heart Problems

RUGGLE-

Dear Mrs. Thompson: I am a girl of age. I have gone with a fellow for four years and he has asked me. to marry him. ' My mother thinks this boy is all right and a good match for me. But she says there are a few things which worry her. The boy's father was a gambler and he drank a little. His mother was not considered much, but she is different now. Do you think it would hurt if I married this fellow, as I have never loved anyone else. My mother is afraid he will turn out like his father, and be mean to me. He does not smoke, drink or gamble, and has never started to. I have never met his father yet. His father arrives from New York next month. Do you think I ought to galong to the station to meet the father? Do you think it would be safe to rorry since I love him? What ran Ljjiay to mother so she won't worry about me and this man all the time? MARY JANE ROSE MAY. Family tendencies are handed down from feneration to generation. It is safer to mnrry an ordinary man from an extraordinary family than to marry en exceptional mnn from an ordinary family. The traits nf the family reappear in the children never the

trpits of the mother and father alone. Consider the relatives of the young man you desire to marry. If his relatives are of eood character, you should not worry about the fact that his father was not all he should have been. Marrlspe is such a grave matter that you should take your time about marrving under circumstances like yours. Your mother's mind will be at rest onlv with the realization that you are made happy by the man vou marry. If your great love lasts after a year or two. tihe will be happy because you are. It wi 1p all right to go to the station with the boy to meet his father. DeHr Mrs. Thompson: (1 ) How often do you think a girl should write to her beau? Is it proper to write once a week? (2) How old shou'd a girl be before she begins work in an office? C3) Is there any ham in kissing if there is true love on both sides, nut no engagement? PERPLEXED. i) Once a week Is certainly often, but all right in some circumstances. (2) A girl should not begin work In an office until she is a high school graduate, unless she is forced to go to work because of financial trouble. (3) It is a bad practice for a girl to kiss without an engagement. A man should love a girl enoug hto marrv her if he takes her kisses.

"TO LOVE, HONOR AND OBEY" "And and you have actually rented it, John?" gaBped Edith in real dismay. "Without talking things over with me? Without my even seeing the house or or wanting it " .-, "Why, child, alive, what's come over you?" John Ferrol put two fingers under his wife's chin, turning her distressed face up to his. "You've pinched and scraped and gone without things for eleven years, Ede, ever since we've been married, and at last, when we're able to have something "Well, perhaps it is a tragedy." "Well, perahps it Is a tragedy," Edith murmured, slipping from under Ferrol's hand. "There'B no telling whether the money will hold out. Things have looked this way before and then, all of a sudden, everything's petered out. I should think you'd be satisfied for a while with the carit's cost a small fortune already! As for your simply going and renting that enormous Hampton house without a word to me, it's positively humiliating!" "Well, I figured there was no use arguing with an obsession," retorted Ferrol. "You've got this economy bu4, Ede, and the only way to do is to commit myself to the Hampton place, move you in willy-nilly, and have you see that nothing terrible is going to happen. We're going to move; that's all there is to it. There's no sense in our poking along In a twenty-five dollar shack when we can pay three times that without turning a hair. Why can't we loosen up and live like regular folks? Why, I'd be ashamed to have my business associates see me grub bing along this way. They'd think the company was going to bust up. I tell you we are making money. I can show you the books. Profits are coming in like anything. I can prove to you " "I don't want to see the books, and I don't want anything proved to me," said Edith in a dull, rebellious tone that John had rarely heard her use. "I feel that I am simply being forced into a scale of living that is all out of proportion. I am being forced to to obey, and 1 detest mere blind obedience." Ferrol looked in astonishment at

i his wife, who was leaning against the

window frame tearing a small handkerchief to bits and trying to control her half-hysterical breathing. He had seen men stand up against all sorts of strains and suddenly collapse when the necessity for resistance was past. And he figured, with more or les.3 Tightness, that his wife was at that moment undergoing a sort of reaction She had borne the long siege of poverty with resourcefulness and courage.

Now that Jorturne had released her, she was unable to realize her freedom, arfaid to try her wings. John's heart softened sympathetically. He felt for his helpmate wit hmore than ordinary masucline understanding of the complex feminine temperament. -

President and Mrs. Wilson Go Ont Shopping Together (By Associated Press) PARIS. Dec. 24. President and Mrs. Wilson went Christmas shopping today, visiting many of the principal shops during a tour of two hours in the center of Paris. Both have been about the city before but this was the first time that they ventured into the

shopping district together, as they often do in Washington. They walked

from the Murat residence down one of

the principal boulevards.

DAKI1NG, PIERCING SCIATIC PAINS

Give way before the penetrating effects of Sloan's Liniment

So do those rheumatic twinges and the loin-achc9 of lumbago, the nerve inflammation of neuritis, the wry neck, the joint wrench, the ligament sprain, the muscle strain, and the throbbing bruise. The ease of applying, the quickness of relief, the positive results, the cleanliness, and the economy of Sloan's Liniment make it universally preferred.

Price 30c, 60c, $1.20

"There, girl." he whispered, patting her: shoulder. You'll see It will pan out all right more than all tight. And, say, Ede, don't feel hurt at my not talking it over with you. . Iwas afraid to for fear you'd put your foot down and spoil the whole scheme. You know I'm not the man to force you into blind obedience. I only feel this time that I've got a better line on things than you have. Come, dear, buck up; let's be happy." Edith didn't feel at all like "bucking up." She felt like going off into a corner somewhere and having a beautiful, jpiserable. self-indulgent cry. But she had too much common sense and too good a poise to allow herself the luxury of further resistance to her husband's plan. She would submit to the inevitable for tho time being, and work out a prograin of economy as far as possible In the new conditions. She went through the motions of "bucking up" therefore (which Is an excellent way of getting back to normal), and took the first opportunity of going over to look at her new home. (To be continued.)

Hat of Late Cardinal Farley Hung in Church '(By Associated Press) NEW YORK, Dec. 24. The late Cardinal Farley's scarlet ecclesiastical hat was hung today without ceremony In the great dome over the high altar in St. Patrick's cathedral in Fifth avenue, in accordance with the rule of the Roman Catholic church. The hat of a cardinal is never worn. It Is . displayed at the head of the body after death and the rules then provide that it shall hang for all time in the cardinal's church. The hat has thirty long tassels, fifteen on each side, arranged in progressive rows of one, two, three, four and five. In order to preserve its shape, it was wired through and through. The hat is suspended by a little button in the center of the crown with the tassels falling over each side in their proper proportions.

Household Hints

TO COOK DRIED FRUIT. Unless dried food is prepared in a

palatable fashion families will tire of it and it will be wasted. This will react unfavorably on the gardens next , year and on the drying campaign. The main difference between dried and fresh food lies in the proportion of water they contain. Therefore the first step in preparation is to put back water about equal in amount to that .lost during the drying.

ACCEPT CREDENTIALS

PARIS. Dec. 24 V. Antonesco. whose appointment as Rumanian minister to France was recently announced, presented his credentials to President Poincare today.

One reason why dried foods have been unpopular is that they so often have been undersoaked and overcooked. When the time for soaking Is long and that of cooking short, the flavor will be more like that of fresh food. Shape and texture must be consider

ed, the more solid the article, the longer the time required for drying, and hence the longer the period of soaking required. After washing, such foods should be put Into three or four times their bulk of water and left covered in a cool place from three to forty-eight hours, according to their substance. '

Should any indications of fermentation appear, they must be scalded at once. Otherwise leave them until they regain their original size or lose most of the wrinkles of the surface; then the time of cooking will be but little linger than that needed by the, same fruit or vegetable fresh from the garden.

The water in which fruits have soaked should be used to cook the food. In case of highly flavored fruits like

the apricot, more water may be use for cooking an dthat In" which it Boal ed will serve to give" flavor to tasti less apples or a gelatine desert. -

To aroosa a doggish liver, to relieve a distressed stomach, to fortify yourself against disease, use

KIP UiimI SU at Ai-r MBi in t! World. Sold OTarywbat. la Bwn. lOc. 2 Sc.

With thankfulness for your liberal patronage we wish you a Joyful Christmas and a Prosperous New Year.

41 North Eighth Street

Ul KM

SAM FRED Clothier

710 Main St.

That your stocking may be overflowing with joy on this happy Christmas Day is the sincere wish of both our stores and all employes

Sample Shoe Store Sam Fred, prop., 610 Main Richmond, Indiana

The Second National Bank

With the passing of one year and the opening of another, the officers and employes of this Bank would convey to all its friends the old, yet ever new wish

A Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year

mi

2 in

Christmas Program at Easthaven Home The Christmas program for the Kaatern Indiana Hospital for the Inrane follows: Christmas Eve. 7:20 r. M. Moving Pictures. Christmas 9:30 A. M. Distribution of Presents 7:30 P. M. Patients' Dance. Thursday. December 26. 8:00 P. M. Employes' Social. Sunday, December 2!). 1:30 P. M. Religious Services. Rev. J. S. Hill. 7:30 P. M. Moving Pictures. Monday, December 30. 7:30 P. M. Patients' Social. New Year's Eve. 8:00 P. M. Employes' Dance. N'ew Year's Day. 2:00 to 4:00 P. M. Open House. Cottages AB, 1-2. CD. Triplet. V, 12-13, K-L and Hospital Groups. 8:00 P. M. Patients' Dance.

voan. tired, worried or despondent it is a iu re signyou needMOTTS NER VERINE PILLS They renew the normal vigor and make life worth living. Be sure and ak foi Mott's Nerverine Pilb WaUAMS MFC CO Pw. CUraUad. OUv

Wishing You a MERRY CHRISTMAS And a Prosperous Year for 1 9 1 9 is the wish of the

Ghenoweth Auto Co. 1 1 07 MAIN STREET PHONE 1 925 i When Better Motor 'Cars Are Built, Buick Will Build Them. "Better Buy a Buick than Wish you Had"

m

This store thanks its many customers and friends for the generous trade accordedluring the momentuous days of 1918, for the generous manner in which they accepted the various restrictions imposed because necessities of war, and for the assistance given in helping us maintain our reduced measure of service during the war period. Buy Now PEACE IS HERE There is Much for Which to Be Joyous for This Christmas Day The sky is clearer as nineteen-nineteen dawns over the horizon. The Treaty of Peace will be signed during the early part of the year. Many are the things to be thankful for this holiday season.

1 1

Mm

p L '