Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 44, Number 71, 1 February 1919 — Page 5

PAGE FIVE t BRINGING UP FATHER By McManus PART PLAYED DY FARMERS in UAR IS GIVEN PRAISE VTUV-OCKR. DID TOO Wj BOT WAIT UNTIL tHE LOOK t OUT SHE KITCHEN WINDOW

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM SATURDAY, FEB. 1, 1919.

Heart Pro Dear Mrs. Thompson: I have been married a year and my husband, I .bare found to my dismay, la Just a common brute. He has struck me twice. I am an orphan and have no one to go to for advice. I have not known a mother's love and care since I was twelve. I was Just 'a working girl with no education to speak of, clerking In a dry goods store for $7 a week when I met him. I only knew him a few months when we were marlred. I have done things in my past that I am truly sorry for and trying to atone for, but I told my husband all about those things before we were married. Then he told me some of his life before we met and we agreed that we were about even.' He still wanted to marry me. I will admit I did not care for him at the time, but I wanted a home like other women have. I have been a true wife and have learned to love him, but his treatment has caused me to despise him almost Every time he gets angry he casta up those things I did before we met. He has told me repeatedly to get out that I Just had a trunk when he married me and to take it and go. Once when he was in a good humor he told me he loved me better than any other woman and that be just told me to go because he thought that would hurt me worse than anything he could say. Now he has told me again, not less than four times in two weeks. I never talk back to him, for . I am afraid of him. I have let him entertain his friends often in our home so that he would ' not want to go other places. Do you think I did right? Shall I leave my pretty home and LUNCHEON DISHES Oyster Rarebit Take one pound of good moist American cheese and cut into small pieces or chop It in a wooden bowl. Heat a sauce pan and melt a small lump of butter and a dash of salt. Pour in the cheese and stir till beginning to melt. Add then two or perhaps a little more tablespoonfuls of milk and mix steadily till smooth. At the last minute stir in one whole egg mixed In a cup with' a teaspoonful of Worcestershire, the same of mixed mustard and some cayenne. Cook a half a pint of oysters in their own Juice for three minutes, Bkimmlng carefully, and pour the oysters without the liquid in the rarebit; simmer for a minute together and serve on strips of toast. Luncheon Salad Four cold boiled diced potatoes, one cup finely cut celery, three-quarter cup cut onion, one cup finely cut cold boiled carrot, one cup salad dressing, two tablespoons chopped parsely, two tablespoons grated raw carrot, three cups shredded lettuce or finely cut cabbage. Mix potatoes, celery, onion, boiled carrots, salt and half the dressing. Line shallow dish with lettuce or cabbage and pile the mixed salad In center. Cover with remainder of salad dressing. Sprinkle with parsley and grated raw carrot and dust with paprika. Orate carrot on coarse grater, MAN'S CASE AGAINST WOMAN Janet Stedman was not of the "Sir, how-dare-you" type. She was not giv en to squealings and elapplngs and spectacular rebuffs. Her resentment was more apt to take a sullen turn. , Resentment at Roy's kiss was Btrong upon her now. What right had Roy Nicoll to humiliate her. How dare he treat her like a flirtatious girl or a married woman who laughed at loyalty. ' Presently she was aware that Nicoll was speaking. She turned to listen, making a swift mental resolution that she would not forgive him, no matter how fervently he apologized. To her astonishent he was not apologizing. He was asking her a question: "Are you done with me, Janet? Outraged and disgusted and all that sort of thing? Determined to Inform your husband of my heathenish conduct? Ready to cast me forever among the human swine?" Janet answered slowly the only one of his four queries that impressed her deeply was she going to tell Walt. "No I shall say nothing about it

to my husband. It would worry him for nothing. It can't be undone. Nor will it be repeated; I'll take care of that" Nicoll said nothing for a moment, busying himself with the steering wheel. "Telling Walt would be the thing I'd care least about," he finally said. "Walt would understand " "Roy Nicoll," cried Janet indignantly. "If you think Walt hold me cheaply " "I mean nothing of the sort," he S interrupted with quiet earnestness, mean he would understand all men understand these things. He would doubtless make a horrible fuss, beat me up or shoot me or something. But in his heart he knows as well as I that the man's side of this business ,

xtvd Beauty lemj go back to seven dollars a week or can you suggest some other way? He does not want children. He says be never liked them. I asked him once to allow me to board a little tot or orphan, but he would not hear of it. Ours was not a slacker marriage because he was classified before we cause he was classified before we He Is home every night. Do you think we see too much of each other? Should I go away for a visit for a few weeks and see if he is any better? I am afraid to walk out for fear he will sell the furniture. He will do anything when he is angry. He has lovely parents, but I could never go to them with our affairs. M. X. W. Most trouble that married women have with their husbands is caused by fear. You are entitled to your home and everything that is in it just as much as your husband and in case you left him the court would see that you had a just settlement. Tour husband does love you or he would not stay home so faithfully. You have taken the right course in making home pleasant for him and entertaining his friends. If he thought he would lose you, he would be more careful of the way he treated you. The next time he strikes you and tells you to go, do so. Since you love children you would be a good nurse for them and could make as much money as you were making clerking, and would have a home besides. Probably he would promise anything to get you back. But in case your sepaaration proved permanent your situation would at least be better than in the home of a brute. It would probably help temporarily to go away on a visit for a few weeks now. ' the downward stroke only. Baked Bean Loaf Mash well three cups baked beans, add one and onehalf teaspoon celery salt, one onion chopped fine, two cups fine dry bread crumbs, two beaten eggs and one-quarter cup milk. Mix well, pack in a buttered loaf tin, pour over it two tablespoons melted butter or bacon fat. Bake forty minutes and serve as you would a meat loaf. Tomato sauce can be used with it or it can be sliced cold as you would meat. A Pineapple Omelet Sweet omelets are pleasant now and then and on light occasions. For this one take four eggs, a good tablespoonful of butter, a pinch of salt and a whisk of black pepper. Beat well, the whites, the yolks and the butter melted. Add the condiments. If you wish add for each egg a tablesepoonful of milk it will, of course. Increase the quantity. Pour into the buttered omelet pan or regular skillet and fold when done with a filling of shredded pineapple and powdered sugar which have stood together for an hour. Cottage Cheese Salad Take desired amount of fresh cottage cheese, seaBon with salt, pepper and a little cream. Form into balls, sprinkle with chopped nuts and pimentos; serve on crisp lettuce, with any good mayonnaise. is never set forth; only the woman's is." Despite herself, Janet found her resentment turning to interest "You'll have to explain, Roy," she said simply. "I don't understand." "Of course you don't. You women never see but the one side your own side. You never think of the temptations you throw in a man's way. You make yourselves sweet and alluring and then are horrified if a man succumbs to your charm. You make all kinds of play for our attentions' and interest and love and then pretend to be cut to the core when we blunder a little in giving in to you. Half the time you women say one thing and mean another. How are we men to know when you'll take offense and when you won't? I've known loads of women who froze a man to death with their manner and then rebuked him for telng 'a fish.' Lots and lots of girls and women like nothing better than to lead a man on and then desert him, chin in air, with withering words on lip? How on earth is a man to know who is sincere and who isn't?" "You've known me for years, Roy Nicoll," retorted Janet, "and there can't be any doubt in your mind as to how I want to be treated." "Well, I haven't treated you disrespectfully," insisted Nicoll stoutly. "I simply forgot myself for a moment, and put what I felt toward you into a kiss. If I had put it into mere words you wouldn't have resented It We are such hypocrites, Janet You would like, to have me want to kiss you, yet you get mad when I actually do! Be honest, now. Isn't it true?" Janet was silent She was wrestling with a new idea. "If we men don't lose our heads over you women," Roy continued, "you resent that Nothing makes a woman so angry or so discouraged as to

feel she is perfectly safe with a man. You may not know it, Janet, but a woman always expects a man to make some sort of love to her some time. That's the reason men do it. Occasionally, we do it at the wrong time. I guess I did tonight, Janet. I was In a blue mood, anyhow. And with you snuggling down there beside me I well I'm sorry," he finished abruptly in awkward apology. Janet's brain was seething with fragments of argument, questions and theories. Something told her there were sound ideas in Roy's philosophy. She held out her . hand as the car reached the door. "Roy Nicoll," she said whimsically, "I think you can teach me something. I'm I'm not unfriendly. Good night." "Till our next talk," smiled Nicoll, and sped away. (To be continued.) WITH THOSE IN ARMY AND NAVY This column, containing news of Richmond and Wayne county soldiers and sailors, will appear dally In the Palladium. Contributions Kill be welcomed. The request of the boys, who are still overseas, not knowing when they will be returned to the States is "keep on writing, home-folks, for it's the letters that make life worth living, and if a few are written that never reach us because we're home-ward bound, they won't matter in comparison to the joy the others will bring," writes Claude Doyle of 105th U. S. Band in a recent letter to his mother, Mrs. D. Doyle of 76 State street. We are at Marolles. It ia about 20 kilos north of Le Mans in the province of Sarthe, about 150 or 200 kilos southwest of Paris. The weather still continues to be warm for this time of year. It has cleared off and the sun has been shining the last few days. We've been having nice moonlight nights, too. It has turned a little chillier this mornin lut it is not very cold. We continue to hear all kinds of rumors about going home. The army does not tell you anything in that line, you know and it's just a case of guessing. Nobody knows, not even the officers. The "Stars and Stripes" though the official publication of the A. E. F., week before last said that the 76th, 27th, and 30th divisions would be the first divisions to leave, so I am hoping they know what they're talking about. We're not In the army of occupation though and I can't Bee why they should hold us over here indefinitely. One consolation, that at the longest it will only be several months longer. I can stand it over here alright with no war on. The climate is much healthier since the armistice was signed. We're getting good rations now. I've got an awful appetite since I've been in the war. The cook is always kidding me about eating so much. He figures that if he cooks enough for "Buck" that's what all the boys call me, that he's doing a good business. We're going to have steak for dinner and some real "O. D." gravy. We are still giving a concert every afternoon In the village. We also play retreat every afternoon in front of regimental headquarters. We play the "Star Spangled Banner" and the "Marsellaise" and never play one without the other. I arm still well and feeling fine. We are leading a rough life but it's a healthy one. I don't weigh near as much as when I left home but I am stronger and can stand more and am a regular old weather-beaten war veteran. We're entitled to a gold chevron now for six months overseas service, t We will also wear the 30tht division ' mark on our left shoulder. Some say I we'll get a medal for serving in Bel gium. I don't know how true it is. Mrs Fannie Fosler received a tele gram today announcing the arrival in J New York of her son, Herbert Fosler, who has been In France with a U. S. hospital corps. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Hunt of Easthaven avenue, received a letter from their son, Donald B. Hunt, yesterday, the first to reach them since November 10.' Hunt wrote that he is with the army of occupation, and was at Coblentz, Germany. He is a member of Medical Supply Dept. 2, Third army, and says he Is feeling fine. Private Ray R. Witherby of the 7th Trench Mortar Battery battalion has received his honorable discharge fol-! lowing his arrival in this coutry from service in France. Oscar Bridgeford of Camp Taylor, Ky., has been mustered out of the service and has arrived in the city. C, Lake 13 also back from camp and he and Bridgeford are again working with the L. M. Hays Wall Paper company. Word has been received from Benjamin, C. Knollenberg, son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Knollenberg, of 139 South Third street He is with the American Auto Assembly base. He writes: "Captain Reed, a brother of George and Harry Reed, of Richmond, Is in charge of the auto park here. "Hope to be home in the near future." V

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PRESIDENT WILSON BOWS HEAD AT GRAVE OF GARIBALDI

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President and Mrs. Wilson with Italian royalty, receiving cheers of Milan crowd from balcony of Royal Palace, and President and Mrs. Wilson at grave of Garabaldi, great Italian patriot. While all Italy honored President Wilson during his recent visit to that country Wilson himself paid tribute to one of Italy's greatest heroes. Slipping away from the great crowds that cheered him, he visited the grave of Garibaldi, Italian patriot and liberator,- and a bowed his head for a moment over ' the grave. The upper picture shows how Wilson was received in every city of the Italian kingdom PRAISE ARTICLE BY DUDLEY GATES Commenting on an article in the Journal of Political Economy by Dudley Cates, a former Richmond newspaperman, the Chicago Tribune says editorially: Writing in the Journal of Political Economy, Dudley Cates touches on one aspect of industrial reconstruction which is bound to cause considerable difficulty unless preparations are made to meet the problem. During the war the government sought to encourage maximum production of a great variety of materials and commodities, and prices were fixed with this end in view. These prices were considerably above the normal level and production was carried on in many- instances under conditions which would normally be prohibitive. With the ending of the war we have or' shall have a large surplus of great numbers of materials and commodities. A falling market seems to be the inevitable result, except where the government maintains the old price by artificial means. Even that method merely postpones the ultimate day of reckoning. But the sudden removal of all price regulation and the "dumping" of these goods on the market would undoubtedly have a disturbing effect on industry. Mr. Cates suggests that the gov ernment should stabilize the return to normal price levels by a gradual reduction of present prices. He believes the government should bear part of the" loss incident to this procedure on the theory that we could better afford to stand that loss than to take a chance on the disorganization of industry which would follow sudden liquidation. uch a program would require careful investigation and careful management, but Mr. Cates has hardly overestimated the danger of attempting to muddle through without any plan. Says No Agreement Is Possible in Russia fBy Associated Press.) VLADIVOSTOK, Feb. 1. Lieut. General Horvath, co-director of the Trans-Siberian railway and the supporter of the Omsk government, in discussing today the allied proposal for a conference between Russian factions on the Princess Islands, said he did not believe that an agreement was possible, between the Bolsheviki and the other factions in Rusia. He said that no truce could be arranged between the factions which could guarantee that the Bolshevik! would not violate it ; A SEVEXTY-YKAR OLD COUPLE Mr. and, Mrs. T. B. Carpenter, Harrlsburg. Pa., suffered from kidney trouble.' He says: "My wife and I suffered from kidney trouble and had rheumatic - pains all throuvn the body. The first few doses of Foiey Kidney Pills relieved us, and five bottles entirely cured us. Altho we are both In the seventies, we - are as vigorous as we were thirty years ago." For sale by

Mrs. Ellen Rodenberg Is Dead at Age of 84 Mrs. Ellen Rodenberg, widow of Henry Rodenberg, 84 years old, died at the home of her daughter, Mrs. John Tieman, four miles south of Richmond, Friday evening at 6:30 o'clock. Mrs. Rodenberg was one of the oldest and best known residents in Richmond. She is survived by one daughter, Mrs. John Tieman, George Rodenberg of Richmond, Ed Rodenberg living two miles south of city and Albert Rodenberg of Iowa, and eleven grandchildren. She was a member of the St. John's Lutheran church. Funeral services will be conducted by the Rev. A. L. Nlcklas at the home Tuesday afternoon at 10 o'clock. At 2 o'clock services will be held at St. John's Lutheran church. Burial will be in Lutheran cemetery. Friends may call any time Monday afternoon or evening. Discharged Army Officer Arrested for Robbery MUNCIE, Ind.. Feb. 1 Captain Franklin R. Day, said to be a discharged army officer, was arrested in Muncie yesterday afternoon, charged with robbing Henry F. Campl Den, Indianapolis, of 55,000 in a down- , town office building yesterday. Day jwas identified by Mr. Campbell as his i assailant CHINESE EDUCATOR KILLED. WASHINGTON, Feb. 1 Dr. T. T. Wone. chief of the fhlnoeo oH !al mission to the United States, and two Chinese students at George (Washington ' Universitv dead in Dr. Wong's home in Washington last night All of the men had been shot

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NINTH STREET BIDS TO BE TAKEN SOON Construction of the new concrete road on South Ninth street will be opened to bidders as soon as the county has consulted the C. and O. railroad and found out whether the railroad is going to build a new bridge on Ninth and South P, said county surveyor Horton, Saturday, in presenting the matter to the county commissioners at their regular meeting. If the railroad is not going to build, the specifications will have to be changed slightly to make the ap proach to the present bridge, the com missioners were told. It is very like ly that the railroad will build a. new bridge in conjunction with the road construction, said Horton. No claims for damages have been filed by property owners and bids will be called for as soon as the railroad has been consulted. Horton hopes to have bids in by the first of May and to have . the construction completed by the end of summer. Viewers on the Russell drainage ditch northwest of town asked the board Saturday for an extension of time until February 15th, which was granted them. Six Less Arrests Made in January This Year Forty arrests were made by the police in January, compared with forty-six in January, 1918, and 54 in January. 1917. Drunks and violation of the liquor law provided 17 arrests. Assault and battery cases numbered 7, burglary 3, jumping on train 3. The rest were scattered. OVERCOAT Pi Phone 2718 OS,

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Women and Boys Helped Raise by Secretary Houston Bumper Crops. - WASHINGTON. Feb.. 1. Tribute to the part played by the nation's soil tillers in winning the war is paid by Secretary Houston in his annual report for 1918, transmitted to congress today by the White House.; Bumper crops were grown both this year and last in spite of adverse weather, the secretary says, - and the millions of men and women and boys and girls on the farm, with the organized agencies assisting them, performed satisfactorily the supremely important task of sustaining their own country and those associated with it in the war. Emphasizing the difficulties and the absence of dramatic glamor in the war job of the' farmer, Mr. Houston speaks with satisfaction of the charge during the last year toward giving agriculture a larger place In the newspapers and magazines and the world's thought and bringing the great urban populations Into closer touch with rural life. "It is one thing to ask a man to save," says the secretary, contrasting the task of the one who conserves and the one who produces; "it is another to ask him, confronted as he is by the chances of the market and the risk of loss from disease, flood and drought, to put his labor and capital into the production of food and feeds and the raw material for clothing."

Civil Service Announcement has been made through the postoffice department that the United Civil Service Commission is perfecting arrangements whereby men who are about to be discharged from the Army or Navy may receive first-hand information concerning opportunities for employment In the Federal civil service. The Commission . has received authority from the Secretary of War and the Secretary of the Navy to appoint its representatives at all establishments where enlisted men are assembled In considerable numbers. These representatives are now being appointed. They will be prepared to inform the men fully concerning positions which are open, to supply them with application blanks, to assist them. If necessary, with the execution of their applications and to advise them relative to civil-service matters generally. It is the plan of the Civil Service Commission to entrust this work to educational directors of welfare organizations already operating at the camps, cantonments, etc. The represents tives of the Commission who are appointed from the personnel of these . welfare organizations 'will have the benefit of the advice and assistance of the Commission's local boards of examiners at nearby cities, in addition to the instructions received from the Commission. Inter-Allied Socialists Hold Meeting in Paris (By Associated Press) PARIS, Friday, Jan. 31 The Inter allied Socialists held a meeting today. French, American, Canadian and Belgian delegates were present at the conference, which considered the conditions unedr which the International Socialist and Labor conference at Berne are Inaugurated. It is expected that a decision will be reached today regarding the participation of Belgian and American delegates in the Berne congress. Head or re best treated "externally NEW PRICES 30c 60c. 91.20 BRIEFS NOTICE Notice Is hereby given that the Wayne County Council will meet in special called session on Monday, February 10th, 1919 at 10 o'clock A. M. in the Commissioners' Court Room in the Court House in the City of Richmond, for the purpose of giving consideration to the matter of an additional appropriation for the South Side Bridge in the City of Richmond, and other matters. W. HOWARD BROOKS. County Auditor, Wayne County. Spectacles and ; Nose Glasses V of Charming Character for Men and Women. They put you on a sure footing in fashion -with comfort wearability and economy, whether in dainty shell or substantial gold or ' army frames. ; r :: ; Dr. Grosvenqj City Light Bldg 32S.8thV

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