Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 45, Number 65, 27 January 1920 — Page 5
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, TUESDAY, JAN. 27, 1920.
PAGE FIVE
Heart and Beauty Problems By Mrs. Elizabeth Thompson
Dear Mrs. Thompson: I am 22 years old and have been corresponding for two years with a girl In another town. She Is 19. I have only been with her a few moments at a time. Her father and step-mother are very strict with her. She has never gone with boys and she says I am the only one she has ever written to. - I have learned to love her very much and she says she loves me. I have tried to plan some way so that I could be with her. Please advise me. W. M. M. About the only path open to you is to marry the girl. ' Do not be hasty about this because you are very young, and doubtless not financially ready to marry. With the girl as your incentive, work hard and save money. Then In a few years you will be well able to take her away from her father and step-mother. It is unfortunate that the girl is denied the right of having young men friends. She is old enough now. Dear Mrs. Thompson: I am a girl 19 years old and keep company with e married man who has three children.
He and his wife have not lived togeth
er for four years and he Is going to get his divorce in March.
He wants me to marry him. He is 35 years old. I like him very much.
but I like htm better tor his money.
as he gives me all I want and I need
It to keep my mother and her house.
I have chances to go with other boys, but of course they haven't the money and anyway I would not ask them for it. If this man gives me money and I give it to my mother he
is all right, but If I don't, she doesn't
like him.
Please advise me what to do. Should
I bo with this man or go with boys
my age and find some one that I can
love. k. s. h. u. Find someone you can love. I can
not understand your mother's selfish-
TiRii. She is sacrificing you for tne
sake of money. Can't you see that takine money from him is selling
yourself to him? He is giving it to you
hpcnusft he thinks It wni win you
When he finds that he cannot have
you the money will stop.
beside them a bunch of violets with a
spray or vauey imes. An envelope held a card on which was written.
'R. I.' and S. W. Don't : voir vn
your friends when you see them? We will call at seven."
(Who continued.)
Ohio News Flashes j
She Married an Average Man
BY ZOB BECKLEY
AKRON Miles Evans, 75. civil war veteran, fell on the ice Saturday morn
ing, ana was instantly killed.
AKRON County commissioners on Saturday offered $500 reward for the
arrest of Lloyd Dunlap, 20, Memphis,
Terra., for the murder of Steve Bosses, shot In an East Aurora restaurant,
Jan. 13.
CLEVELAND Joseph J. Shape,
Dead .of an automobile body making company here, is under arrest charged with being a fugutive from justice. FOSTORIA Harold Young, 24, sent a bullet Into his head after leaving a note saying he had killed himself for the love of his sweetheart. LANCASTER Ninety quarts of 30year old whiskey and $1,600 in cash were discovered by workmen razing the abandoned residence of the late Richard Gorham, former saloon keeper, dead for 15 years.
PORTSMOUTH Ruth Lake, 13, living at Fullerton, Ky., opposite Portsmouth, is dead from burns received
when her dress caught fire from an open grate.
HAAS PRESIDENT
OF "Y", BOARD NAMED Officers for the coming year for the
ocal Y M. C. A. were elected at a meet
ing held Monday night as folows:
E. M. Haas, president; Dr. Charles
S. Bond, vice-president; K. E. Kenny,
recording secretary, and Jesse Welch-
man, treasurer. Hass succeeds Richard Sedgwick, who Btil retains his po
sition as member of the board of di
rectors, as president. Appointment of
the various association committees
will be made by Haas some time in the near future. Members of the board
of directors folow:
J. H. Bentley. Dr. C. S. Bond. A. M.
Gardner. E. M. Hass, E. H. Hasemeler,
James Hornaday. Horace Kramer. H.
R. Robinson. Richard Sedgwick. E. H. Scott, C. E. Thompson, Jesse Wiech-
roan, Charles Jenkins, John M. Coate
and K. E. Kenny. While those belonging to the board of trustees of the
association are:
Adam H. Bartel, president; James A. Carr, vice-president; John H. Johnson
secretary: Henry Gennett, John F. Mc
Carthy, Pettis A. Reid, and P. W.
Smith. The trustees will meet soon to
elect officers for the coming year.
now located in the Forward Movement
headauarters In this city as head of
the survey department.
Williams and Werking
View School Bandings C. O. Williams, county superintend-
ent of schools, and C. E. Werking,
architect, will go to Greenville, O., Wednesday to see the ' high school
there, to get Ideas for the new consolidated Center township school to be
As the door closed behind Athena an abandonment of loneliness seized me. I flung myself on the couch and sobbed hysterically for half an hour wildly, unreasoningly, miserably. I don't know what is the matter with
me. I seem to be somebody else, yet
yself at the same time. I nicked myself up at last, batbed
my face, brushed my hair and tried
to think. The first thing I did was to address an envelope to Jim. In it I jrtaced the check he sent me for the "housekeeping and spending money." I felt calmer after that. As if I would touch a penny of Jim's money aow! How I detest the woman who accepts support from a man to whom ehe gives nothing, and who is content and comfortabe with his eternal work and his "satisfactory housekeeper." Following a plan I have always found good In time of discouragement or plain "blues," I took a luxurious bath with plenty of scent in the water, dressed myself in my best clothes and went out to walk in the sunny streets. It never fails to raise one's spirits. I took Jim's check along to mall and dropped it into the first box I came to with a feeling of deep relief. It seemed my first step toward freedom and independence. At Thirty-fourth street the crowd became dense with moving people and automobiles. The sun felt delightfully springish. Color was everywhere in th women's faces, the men's ties, the
new hats riotou? with flowers and.
crisp ribbon, the shop windows. Exhilaration shot through my blood, the stronger as a reaction from my miserable mood. . Life was gay. The world looked full of opportunities for success and happiness. As I nassed the Waldorf a man
whose face seemed vaguely familiar ' glanced from the open, flower-decked window of the ground-floor diningroom. I met his eyes first over the rim of a wine glass. I thought I saw him call the attenHion of some one to me probably the person sitting at table with him. But I passed too quickly to see more. I kept on straight up the avenue, living in the moment, thinking of nothing except the joy of being in New York Instead of Hammonds Corners.
I ought to be thinking of how I shall make my living. The rent of the apartment has been paid to the first of the month. I have nearly three weeks in which to start afresh. So I have decided to give myself a few days of luxurious loafing. Then I shall go to Randy Lynch and ask him for my old Job back conducting the Correspondence Corner and any other work on the paper be can find for me. I stayed outdoors as long as possible. At 6 o'clock the gay, expensivelooking, pleasure-seeking crowd on Fifth avenue became mixed with homerushing clerks and factory workers. I had walked so long that my feet ached and my ebullient moon had faded. Yet I areaded the empty flat. To prepare dinner for my solitary self seemed out of the question. I decided to freshen up, rest a few minutes and go out somewhere for dinner.
Athena no longer welcomes me in tho
old way. She scolds, argues and challenges.
The elevator boy kept me waiting
while be delved In a closet under the
stairs, in the way of all elevator boys,
for a box he said had come for me
"Flowers, I reckon, Mis Salsbery,"
he said, with a grin. And flowers they were! Dozens of shining golden jonquils, and tucked
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QUININE
Attend Dill Lecture, Urge
Of Central Labor Council Every person in Richmond is urged
by the Central Labor council to hear
the talk to be given by C. C. Dill, former congressman from Ohio, on
transportation problems of the country, and plans outlined to solve them,
in the coliseum, Feb. 3.
Every plan offered to solve these problems will be considered by Dill, including the Plumb plan and the Cummins and Nash bills. Besides the railroad problems, Dill will speak on the high cost of living and ways to solve it.
located In Centerville.
Monday, Williams and Werking,
with members of the Center township I
school board,, visited the consolidated
school at New Paris.
MEET AFTER 63 YEARS. . LAFAYETTE. Ind., Jan. 27. A reunion, echoing an adventure of 63
years ago. is being held at the home
of Mr. and Mrs. Mathias Stone In this
city, two cousins who went west from j
mis county in, isao. meeting nere tor
tho first time since then.
Richmond Friends Leading
Forward Movement Meeting
in Indianapolis and State Holding that the main work of the chujch is spiritual, the Rev. Charles
M. Woodman, pastor of the Allen Jay Memorial church in this city, emphasized that the call for men is greater than the call for money, at the closing session in the Indianapolis Friends' church last Sunday of a series of conferences inaugurating Western Yearly Meeting's part in the general Foryard Movement campaign. Similar conferences are being held throughout Western and Indiana Yearly Meeting with the following leaders In charge: President David M. Edwards of Earlham; the Rev. Wood-
man; Errol D. Peckham, pastor of the
Friends' church at Brooklyn, N. Y., and Charles E. Tebbits, of California,
Elderly People Have A Daily Health Problem Stomach muscles and digestive organs slow to act as age advances
MOST people find the years slipping cy without realizing it, until suddenly confronted with the fact that they , can no longer digest everything they would like to eat. It then becomes their daily task to avoid what they know to be chronic constipation. When exercise and light diet fail it will be necessary to resort to artificial means. Strong physics and cathartics, however, are not advisable for elderly people. They aet too powerfully and a feeling of weakness results. What is needed is a laxative containing effective but mild properties. This is best found in Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin which is a combination of simple laxative herbs with pepsin. It acts gently and without griping, and used a few days will train the digestive organs to do their work naturally again without other aid. Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin has been on the market since 1892 and was the private formula of Dr. W. B. Caldwell, who is himself
past 80 years of age and still active in his profession. It can be bought at any drug store and one bottle is enough to last even a large family many months. It is a trustworthy preparation. In sfcfc of the fact that Dr. Coldwell's Syrup Pepsin is the largest selling liquid laxative in the world, there being over 6 million bottles sold each year, many who need its benefits have not yet used it. If you have not, send your name and address for a free trial bottle taDr. W. B. Caldwell, 511 Washington St, Monticcllo, Illinois.
noun relieves nip in 3 day.
Money back if it fail. Th
genuine bos Has Red
p wita Mr. Hill' picture.
At AUDrmg SUM
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HEALTH AUTHORITIES WARN TI PUBLIC TO
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According to late press reports issued by state and city health authorities. Influenza is again becoming epidemic in many sections, and much alarm Is now felt that it may become general over the entire country. The disease has made Its greatest progress in Chicago and vicinity, where thousands of new cases are reported daily. Recently 2.514 cases were reported in Chicago In one day, breaking last year's record when the epidemic was at its height. Reports from other sections are also alarming, and the disease is gaining headway in some sections of Texas, Virginia, the Middle-West, and on the Pacific coast. It has also appeared in other communities, although it has not as yet reached the epidemic stage. Owing to the lateness of the season It Is not thought possible that the disease can become the great and terrifying scourge that it was last year, when it swept the entire country and claimed its victims by the hundreds Of thousands. The danger is too
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d everything possible should be
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People who are well and strong are not likely to contract the disease be
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ABY will be happy when you
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Remain Our Great JANUARY CLEARANCE
MJE Closes Saturday
Buy Now For the remainder of this winter, and next season it will be a wise investment.
CASH IS NOT NECESSARY YOU CAN BUY ON OUR LIBERAL CREDIT PLAN
The bargains are "Sweet meat" for thrifty buyers and are rapidly being depleted So we urge that you make your selections as soon as possible THE REDUCTIONS RANGE FROM
to
off
And affect all of the heavy weight clothing for Ladies', Men and Boys.
CASH PRICE CREDIT STORE 15-17 N. 9th St ! R. E. Brewer, Mgr. ..
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