Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 38, Number 254, 2 September 1913 — Page 8
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THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, TUESDAY, SEPT. 2, 1913
PALLADIUM'S MAGAZINE AND HOME PAGE
"CM A T'T'CD DD"
(Copyright 1913 by the Press Publishing Company. Xrw York World
B C. Pavne
- -. - . . I NAW sir vow yoong'uns f p- - I Its rile. kert? cr way f njNcTe. S'.-rHer Mu5r"7 IsmatteI IaiVstIs r THAT WOODS UT 1 A I WOMDEl? OP ANS,TL05tJ I5 Ca v E. u 5 S L ' J. r YHEV .5 BEAKS -MEf rMpM J L rvt 60T 6M 3 suX A, v-E waj fs --ii H I-.,- ...I ' i I I H I ! ,.!, I .1- I -1 -,11 .
MARRIED LIFE SECOND YEAR
A NEWPORT STYLE
IF
By MABEL HERBERT URNER. FOR several days Warren had not been himself. He had. seemed worried and strangely preoccupied. To all of "Helen's anxious inquiries he replied evasively. And when she persisted, he had grown irritably, said he was all right, if only she would leave him alone. "Ypr'le sure it's not about speculating? You haven't lost anything?" She asked fearfully, several times. And he answered curtly, "Of course not. Can't you stop harping on that." She tried to leave him alone, but she was only half convinced. One night she awoke to find him walking up and down his room, a lighted cigar in his hand. "Why Warren, what is it? Can't you sleep? "Oh, I am just nervous, that's all. Thought I'd get up and smoke awhile, I will be all right when I finish this. 'But Warren" "I am all right, I tell you," he replied, "and 1 don't want to be fussed over She went back, buP not to sleep. And for over an hour, she heard him moving about his room. She longed to go to him, to ask him what was wrong. But she knew it would only Irritate him. BARELY TOUCHED HIS FOOD. The next morning he barely touched bis breakfast, and hurried off to his office. That day was a long one for Helen. She could not keep her thoughts on the baby or on her work. WTarren's worried face was continuously before her. And she was haunted with a feeling of impending trouble. About two o'clock she called him up, saying that she just wanted to hear from him that she could not help being
Why difi he always resent her sym
pathy; her desire to help? "Dinner ready?" he asked abruptly, j 'Yes, dear; it has been ready for j some time.' ! 'Well, let's have it, then. I haven't 1 eaten anything today.' j Helen hurried out to help Delia put : the dinner on the table. But Warren I did not eat. After a few moments he pushed his chair back and left the table. Helen repressed her de- ' sire to follow him, for she knew he j did not want her. But she could not ! eat, although she remained at the table and made a pretense of finishing her dinner. When she went into the sitting room Waren had some papers covered with figures spread out before him. He did not look up; so she got out her sewing and sat down quietly on the other side of the table. Although she kept her eyes on her work, she was tensely conscious of every ; scratch of his pen -and of his white set face as he bent over the figures. ! It had come at last the loss in ' speculation that she had so long fear- ; ed. She felt certain of it now with ! a sickening heart heavy certainly. How much had he lost? Was it more j than they could repay. Oh, if he could be no harder than the sick fears
that filled her now. But she dared not question him any more. THE STRAIN OR SILENCE. She could hear Delia moving about
in the dining doom, putting her dishes
away. In a few minutes she would be through and go to her room. That would mean that it would be almost eight. How much longer would Warren figure there in silence? She wondered if other husbands put their wives from them in time of trouble. There was no sound from the kitchen or dining room now; Delia had finished. Everything was still exceptfor the scratching of Warren's
Some neighboring tower clock
YOU DON'T LOVE YOUR WIFE, SOMEBODY ELSE WILL
Fully Described by Olivette
anxious. And he replied brusquely ! pen
that he was all right but had no time struck the half hour half past eight.
to answer foolish telephone calls. And she heard it strike nine
Helen left the phone with quivering lips. And she tried to excuse his curtness perhaps she shouldn't have telephoned when he was so busy.
A little gurgling cry from the baby called her into the nursery. But Winifred was only half awake. It took only a few minutes to quiet her.
It was late when he came home, j Helen covered up the little hands Dinner had been waiting some time. ' that, even in their sleep, were restOne glance at his pale, haggard face j less, and kissed the soft, warm cheek, verified Helen's fears. Instinctively j How sweet she was! Might this loss ehe ran and put her arms about him. j in some way react in HER? Might "Oh, Warren what is it?" it lead on to more straightened conFor a moment he stood passive, then i ditions which would affect her future? he shook her off angrily. j And over Helen there swept a reali"Now, let's not have any heroics, j zation stronger than ever before of I've had all I can stand today with- j all the responsibilities of parentage, out that. j When she came back into the sitCUT I WANT TO HELP YOU. I ting room, Warren had thrown down But 1 want to help you. I can bear j his pen and with his head on his anything if you will only tell me j hand was gazing straight before him. what it is, and let me help you." Again she took up her sewing, her 'I can bear anything." ' heart beating heavily. And then he. "Well, you can't help me except ! broke the silence. Without glancing ty leaving me alone. When I've any-! towards her, still staring in front of thing to tell you I'll let you know." j him, he said: Helen turned away to hide her "I've lost just $1.500 and $1,200 is tears. Why did he always repel her? all I have to pay it with.
HOW
Do You Dress Your Hair Take Care of Your Teeth, Keep Your t-
READ WHAT PRETTY MARY NASH SAYS
TALKING to Mary Nash is not a little mono-dialogue wherein the interviewer decides what a girl of the particular type of the interviewed ought to say and says it for her. Talking to Mary Nash is. instead, taking part in a scintillating and yet deeply thoughful conversation in which one of the most earnest, charmingly philosophical and spiritually lovely girls of the stage spurs the interviewer on to try to hold up her end of a chat that begins with personal pulchritude, veers to the problems of living this sometimes brings to women and dutifully swings back to a considertion of beauty per se. And, be it added, finally,, that talking to Mary Nash and with Mary Nash means fifteen minutes of pure joy between and added to the acts of the though-compelling play, "The Lure," in which she portrays the latest heroine of the MaxIne theatre. "Has the play made you say, 'Beauty is a snare and a delusion' and share with the mother in "Fanny's First Play the thought "happiness is from within?" asked Miss Nash with that combination of desire to know and understand the humorous appreciation of life that seems to me to be her salient characteristic. "It is all true unless beauty has a guiding force of mentality and idealism. True beauty has to be spirit and spirit illuminated by the inner glow from the inner shrine that keeps a woman's beauty, a pure, flickering flame. "Nowadays any woman should be ashamed not to be good looking. PreUness may result from a combination
of doll-like features and French cos--metics; but beauty is clean, healthy body-shell lighted from within by spirit and high ideals. 'I say any woman ought to be ashamed not to be good-looking, for good looks have been made so easily possible they mean that clean, just-had-my-bath-look that is always so delightfully present in the pinkcheeked Englishwoman. They mean carefully brushed and washed and neatly arranged hair; and clean, cared for teeth; and clear eyes that have had enough sleep and cold water bathings; and a clear skin that results from a properly considered digestion. "Good looks meau a controlled nature that does not exhaust itself in unworthy emotions. Good looks mean simple, fresh clothes as free from tawdriness as the body they encase or the mind that has designed them in tune with that body. So. since these things have "been lectured about and taught and written of, any woman of brains and perception must stop and look and listen and feel shame to fail in her heritage of clean, healthy good looks. 'To elevate good looks to beauty, add to your physical care of the outer shell one part of idealism, one part of love for the world, one part of willingness to work and study, and one part of simple adherence to duty with these keep the fire in your inner shrine aglow, and beauty won't be a delusion and a snare, but a fact of universal delight as your hapy spirit wells up from within. "Do you know, I have often noticed in the country that the girls are growing up with a flower-like loveliness
f i''fi'.?' i$tfc&': a r sfh'' fl ' vatv w iwty$a?wV 111 I m: tr 1 V I raoi FT
The Newport crare in bathing suits is for the slit skirt garment, and if you see some excuse for the split skirt of the hobble type, where the cut comes at the ankle in order to enable the wearer to walk, perhaps you can also Mgure out a cut in a knee-length skirt that the wearer may swim. Here we picture the prettiest example of the new fashion freak we have seen. Black mohair forms the bloomers that are banded in at the knee and fastened at the side with round white bu'.tons. The same material is used for the one-piece top garment, which is caught around the waist in a fashion borrowed from the bathrobe. For this belt and bow and for the trimming of the suit hercules braid two inches wide is used, and to outline neck, sleeves and skirt cut high at the i sides a half-inch braid is used. Bands of this narrow braid hold the two apron-like parts of the skirt together and strap the sleeves, which are cut in a bishop's mitre line to match the skirt. The home dressmaker may copy this suit for about two dollars.
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By DOROTHY DIX. recent divorce case a young
lias got tc have some woman ho will listfii unw rariiHy, intelligently aud sitivpatlu t;t all to his day dreams, and if he doesn't find this sort of a listener at home he does find her in his office lor on the next street. She is always 1 somewhere about, and the wife is responsible lor his locating- her. If sh
had beMi a good listener she could
ionship. It is the untidy and slovenly j woman, who wears soiled wrappers
auu curi uauers ai noine. who hi is a i . . ,. : i .
i ... ,.,,....,, ,.,.,t;,,i that ' - i jifi I'mrii nun uvu r-i xthiuk and prettv woman testified that premilml on chorus girls and other n
. l r, h on sit , m "er SaCretl au U -n,inu:u, r,M:una mirror, dear Sir and Madam: and summer resorts she would sit up , husband of his faults who makes i . ..... ,.,.,.x.., .
With IlODOllJ lO aaav ,.jrt f.,r ..v..rv a,li-fln. . .
,imB """ - " M ill SHAM) lilt WIKK. SUMKlime , ,, 00 o Lnj.i- .f l,.. i ,. .o ...
' ' ihHV KI.Si: IS GOING TO BKGIN. flattery by the shovelful. j
reports. ; . . . .
i i nil 11 ua f v.' v v v. in : ruiu - f
As a result ot her neglected ap- . , ..,!,.,
uoii iu joiij nun tii7ij, auu ini uitii
lonelv and lorlorn
sneak to. while he spent his
perusing the financial news and study-i
ing the stoc
pearance, a good looking young man
A Lung Stay. Belle Passay-I'm tired of being pnr-
that he is the handsomest, biggest, j sued for inv monev. I'm goiiu: lo th
"Woman Made From Man's Backbone
undertook to console her, and among ; bravet;t man in ,lu. world, and if his i country and Ne"as a oor Ctrl mii.I
other things he said to her, "You are . wife won't do it he will hunt around wait for the first man who oflVn blntoo pretty a woman to have a man , until he finds some other woman who self. Blanche limit Well, you staixt read a new-naper in vour face" ! wiU- Also, every man has rot to haye ; the country in summer well enough, i The l tdy w as bored and felt her- i some woman to love him and make ; but you'll find the winters Just horrid 1 self ill 'used, she loused for cheerful j a fufs over him an1 'bab' hin1-" and j "rck ; society and somebodv amusing with if his wif won"1 do il 6ume other wt ! : whom to converse. Therefore she ac- I man win- ( Germany, some years ago. when 'cepted the sympathy thus offered her,! -Ien can't confide in each other, and Frau Ilecker, a menagerie proprietor, with the natural result that ensues te'' olher men what wonderful things was married to Herr Schneider, she w hen a handsome bachelor plays the the' are PinS to do- The' ,ark the took to him as dower an elephant, a I Good Samaritan to a married woman. nerve to rnake such an artless display ! lion and several other wild animals. Without discussing the merit of this ! vanit' to eat'h other, but every man jto form the nucleus of a rival show.
! particular divorce case, that one little j
phrase. "You are too good looking a I woman to have a man read a news1 paper in your face," contains a sermon that every married man and ! woman might listen to with enlightenj ment, ami apply to themselves with j profit. i For the gist if it is this that if i you dont make love to your husband j or wife, some other woman or man ; win. i If you want to keep your own, you I must look after it. j THE DELUSION. When you leave the door unlatched, j you invite thieves to come in and ' steal. j It is part of the vanity of human I nature that none of us can ever imagine stu b an improbable thing hapI pening as for anybody who has once ; loved us, to cease loving us. In our I own eyes, we are always so tr&nscend- ! entally beautiful, and wise, and fasjcinating that it is impossible to break ; away from our hypnotic spell, no matj ter what we do. Hence we take liblertios with love, in the placid assur-
' anee Hint nothing can kill it.
A man marries a girl, and he reads the paper in her face, and responds to her efforts to carry on a conversation by grunts, yet it never crosses his mind that he is the dullest and most stupid companion in the world, and that she must be bored to a frazzle. Not one man in a thousand ever deliberately tries to make himself entertaining to his wife. He feels that he doesn't have to, and he never realizes that after standing about so much of it, she will get up some fine day and go out and hunt up a man to talk to who is interesting and sympathetic. Or. perhaps, as is often the case, a
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MRS. JESSIE HARDY STUBBS.
PITTSBURG Sent. 2 "If It were true that woman was made out of mtt.
man is frankly brutal to his wife. He ; u mugt nave been out of thP backbone of Adam-not a rib." This waa the insults her every day of his life. He , decaration of Mrs Jessie 1Iardy gtubbs an ardent 8uffrage worker of Chi cmmumiliatps her by doling out monev to her, he ruts her to the quick by ; po an a member of General Rosalie Jones army of lecturinu hikers, while sneering at her opinions, he ridicules addressing a large audience here. "Read the first chapter of Genesis, she her until she shrinks and flinches un- advised, "not the twenty-fifth and twenty-sixth verses of the second, and der his cruel tongue just as much as JOu will find that God created man male and female at the same time, she would from bodily blows if he , But since all preachers have been men, they have taken the second chapter, beat her. ... . . ... . . . ..
ana ine story nas miiuencea au me ages.
For late bathing days
THE EXCEPTION.
Such a man and millions like him I 'are satisfied that their wives will go! ion admiring and adoring them, no matter what hapens. They think it isn't worth while to be tender and I considerate, or even polite to a mere j ; wife. j 1 Most women do stand neglect and ; I iil treatment w ith w hatever patience j heaven sent them, but now and then one with more spirit and less en- ; 1 durance than the rest forsakes this j i rU ath-in-life existence, or some worn-; ( an, who could not live without love j accepts from some other man the af
fection that her husband ceases to
A.uers
r T" . "T T. fully con uriair Vigor
Ingredients: Sulphur, Glycerin, Quinin. Sodium Chloride, Capsicum, Sage,
Alcohol Water, Perfume All skilfully combined. Falling hair ceases,
disappears, hair gro-wta pro-l
Does not color. tz.f-rV.-Z
that makes the young things all so the 25,0"0 young girls who go yearly !p.;VP her.
pretty and sweet that they seem like to feed the stream of horror would ; ir -a the custom in such instances H
human flowers? You see. that is be- ( not be true.' to look upon the husband as a sadly cause they are coming to know how j But this is a beauty talk! We will i misused man. but practically the fault I to take care of themselves and to 1 not go on into the problems of human- js always his. It is the husband's; their own knowledge is added Xa-jity; we will just content ourselves ; hand that generally opens the door f
with wondering if Mary Xash has not lpr tne affinity. His wife never quit j helped us all toward a solution of ; loving him until he had made him-1
"If only the girls in the city would I our own problem when she tells us : 5e;f unlovable. She never wearied of j
rget that thev know w here to buv . to be healthy and happy and w;se, him ur.nl h- lost interest
ture's careful attention
A SPECIFIC
forg
in her..
peroxide and rouge and lip salve, and j uu se " A ul 1 re would --ne m:gnty tew women
would, instead, make a science of keeping their bodies clean and sweet and nourished in healthiness and tend the inner shrine, too, I think our good old human race would grow to be as beautiful as it surely must have been intended to be before we, with
beauty the beauty of ideals.
LILLIAN LAUFERTY.
No Argument. The extremely well dressed young man. with but few claims to financial
cruelty and ignorance spoiled the j forts to capture the p,r, of bis choire. original design. j ..Tou My TOUrself Marion." he pleadOh. if only all the girls growing j nhat voar fatber is anxious to et up would value brains and training you off bia hands." as highly as beauty for they are; .Th,r. t.wr ir rinnH" chu r.H-H
part ot true Deauty s sell pernaps tremulously
the
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w ho would ever look outside their J own home for somebody to entertain !
them, sorr.ebody to shrw them tenderness, if thoy had anybody at home to pay ther.i any attention. Precisely the same thing may be
i said of women. It i almost invariably ; ! the wife who prepares the way for the other woman. It is the nagging , wife who sends her htisband away from heme to find peace. It is the ;
"That's wbr I'm afraid moro:a v co coe3 nommg out rrei ,
and ccir.p'.ain and weep who drives a ; man away to seek cheerful compan-j
:he stcry of Sylvia and of poor little j ha won't listen to you L'Drdccotfs ' and ccir.p'.ain and weep who drives a
Charlotte Baker of Springfield of all J Jmi.
If you have an engagement ring to buy, come In and look through our large assortment of rings su'-fable for the engagement gift. Our diamonds are of the purest water, and we have a large variety from which to make your selection. You can depend upon the quality of the diamonds and precious stones you purchase here. We guarantee everything we sell to be exactly represented.
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