Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 38, Number 292, 16 October 1913 — Page 10
THE RICH5IOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, THURSDAY. OCT. 16, 1913
Married Life the Second Year
By MABEL HERBERT URNER. Helen was sitting out in the yard under the trees, sewing on a little white dress for Winifred. It was the second week of her convalesence. The color had returned to her cheeks and she was rapidly gaining strength. Winifred lay on a rug at her feet, playing with a large inaltese cat, that stretched itself lazily on the grass and submitted, with loftly indifference to her caresses. Through the open sitting-room window came the hum of a sewing machine. For the last few days, Mrs. Parker, the village dressmaker, had been sewing there. Helen had sent to St. Ixmis for samples of dimities and lawns and had ordered enough to make several dainty summer dresses for both herself and Winifred. And now Mrs. Baker and mother and Aunt Mollie were all helping to make thfin. They were glad that she should have this interest and diversion during the tedium of her eonvalescene. But to Helen it meant far more than that. She was planning to go back to Warren with some pretty fresh summer dresses to make herself and Winifred as dainty and attractive as she could. A SECOND HONEYMOON. "And we are going to begin over again ." "His last words still sung in her heart. She wanted to make her return something of a second honeymoon, and happier and more beautiful than the first. She was planning countless little ways by which she could make him love her more. She would never let him see her carelessly dressed again. Kvery morning she would put on a dainty gown and every evening dress for dinner more carefully than she ever had before. And she would try not to show her love quite so much. She would be more reserved, more elusive. She would make him seek her caresses. She would not give them unasked anfl perhaps he would value them more. Helen ondered much over the long talk she had with her father, just after Warren left. She realized the value of his advice, even that part which had hurt her most. "From what I had seen of Warren I judge he is a man who would become satiated with a love too freely given. I know all the tenderness of your nature and how you crave for affection. But, Helen, L believe you would receive more from Warren if you gave him less." And now, she was going to give him less. Not that she would be so apparently cold that he would divine her purpose. But she would be delicately, shyly elusive. She would make him feel that, now having been away from him so Jong, she- could not help but be a little different, that absence had made him something of a stranger, and that only by his love could he win her anew. The soft color deepened in her face as she planned and dreamed all the poossibilities of happiness their reunion would bring. She remembered vividly a novel she had once read, in which a woman had always held her husband a lover by her very aloftness, by a reserve and mystepy with which she surrounded herself. And feeling that he had nev'r riui'e v on her, he remained even an ardent wooer. THE SECRET OF POPrr.SSION. It is the lack of purs.ii-:, the feeling of assured possession, of nothing more to attain, that brings satiety in married life. While Helen had vaguely realized this, blinded by her own deep, unwavering love, she had tried to believe that Warren's love would be as unfaltering. This is the greatest injustice of sex, that, once having won a woman's love, the man can afford to be himself but the woman never can. Upon her rests always the anxiety of keeping his love. She can never quite afford to be "just herself." Part of her inature she must withhold and part of it she must dissemble. "Helen, can you come in now and try this one," her mother called from the porch. It was a dainty blue and white dimity house gown, and, as Helen tried it on before the mirror, she was happily conscious that it made her look very young and girlish. Her illness seemed only to have accentuated the
Lady Constance Stewart Richardson On How to Acquire a Beautiful Figure Through Dancing
The two exercises pictured today show classic dancing steps intended to produce suppleness of limbs and waist.
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EVERYBODY COCK BOQK
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EUCHRE CLUB OPENS YEAR AT BOND HOME
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is palatable to th ;r tas-U-s. To pn-perly pres- rv- a !.:srami i , c:n
tiiiu '. as the Freiu-h t-a--iii the r serv-d plain, or with a sauce r t i f no:r.-n r,ofr Uarn how ti.a' :t , :t:;t ai'Yi s wit'.i tht m or
CAMRRIlKiE CITY. Oct. IS Mrs. Harry Bond entertained the member
i of the Lone Hand Kuchre club yes
terday afternoon at the opening meeting of the season. Around the thre tables were Mesdanies K. I. I-.ffen-dorfer. K. T. Krohnarh-l. J. R. LittelU Mr. O Kruesch. V:. IV Filby, Mrs. F. T Luddinstor.. F. H Ohmlt. B. K. Strattan. F F. Homer. R. C. Leslie. B. A Carpenter and H U Bond. Mrs fhTVit assisted the hostess in serin,s refreshments
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These Pictures Were Especially Posed for this Page.
By LADY CONSTANCE STEWART RICHARDSON. ONE of your great Americans sang in an exquisite little poem of "The glory that was Greece; the grandeur that was Rome." The glory and grandeur of these nations were founded not only on their art and culture and prowess as warriors but on a basic condition that made brains and power reach a great height of perfection on the sublimity and healthy beauty of the human body. When laziness and high living weakened the bodies of the Greeks and Romans, decjine and fall were near. But in the flower of their national health and youth the bodies of the Greeks and Latins were physically splendid,
and the endowment of mental power,
tollowed physical health. In these simple facts there lies a great lesson for us of today. In bodily health and strength lie the power of the individual and the health of the nation as well. I have said so often and am always glad to say again that in the beautiful classic dances that have come down to use from the ancients flies the simplest secret of bodily grace. But today I want to add a few principles of bodily health and care that are practiced of necessity by the professional dancer, and that the bodily beauty seeker would do well to emulate. Begin by training children so that their muscles will fall naturally, in motion or repose, into graceful lines. Teach them that food is very import
ant in one way and of no consequence
in another. Food must nourish
husband u pick out lias in acid or too mushy, for r."i:hserved for home cousumptiv
is f) pickle them in ab-ohol Having selected your 1. ".stand, carry it heme without shaking it, and keep it under look and key. Much d p. n;.- upon our carefulness in this respect, nr alas! many of our .'.ear, s' lady friends have kleptomaniac tendencies and a sweet tooth and when they see a real sugar plum of a husland that has been left lying un. uarded around the house they are sometimes t mpted to steal it. Good houekeep, is are divided as to whether husbands should be skinned or not before preserving. Some hold that the first thing to do with a hu.-band is to peel off its bank roll, ooniend'.ni: that it is easier to keep it that way. w hile others argue that separating a husband from its small change is all that is necessary, and that if you remove all of its long green from it it is apt to sour on you and : rment. As bt-th proct sses are successful it seems to be a matter of individual skill with the housewife, so the young wite may take her choice of methods. The husband is now ready for the laM process of preserving. The old way . in vogue in our mother's times, was to salt it down in brine. This was done by a housewife keeping on tap a large supply of tears which she poured over her husband morning, noon and night, until he was as sticky and salt as a keg of codfish. This means of keeping a husband did not prove satisfactory, however, and the modern scientific woman preserves her husband in sugar instead of salt. To do this make a syrup of home comforts, consisting of three hundred and sixty-live good dinners a year, a clean and cheerful house, with a wife who is a ministering angel in it: flavor this mixture with enough independence to keep a man guessing bushels of love, a dash of deviltry, entertaining conversation to taste, a liberal supply of laughter and a practically unlimited amount of jollying and flattering. Steep the husband in this mixture and keep it simmering on the hearth-stone, and you will have no trouble in turning out an article of the preserved husband that would take a prize at any county fair and be easily salable at a Woman's Exchange. ' B. The success in preserving a husband lies in making the domestic sauce so sweet and strong that the kind made away from home will seem weak and flavorless beside it. This recipe for preserving husbands has been tried by our experts, and it is guaranteed to work. Follow it and vou cannot fail.
j Trade in Foreign Ccunt'-ie. i In foreign countries uu come into competition with the lot goods from every land. An artu'.e r.mst have merit of the highest order to win esteem In many of these countries i Chamberlain's Cough Remedy is the most popular med.. .ne :a use for ' coughs and colds because ;t is the best I For ale by all dialers. I i A.I ver : ; MniiI ) 1 The provincial n iu er reports that 'during the laM y ar the railways of I Nova Scotia earned nearly ne hundred thousand passencers and ovr fie million tons of freight. Revenue ! increased $:??. tv.. both net and gross receipts advancing
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"(JETS-IT " FOR CORNS SURELY C.ETS THEM It's the Corn Cure on a New PlanGets Every Corn Quick and Sure. "If you're like me. and have tried nearly everything to get rid of corns
and have still got them, just try the new. sure, quick. ea. painless wmy
body and give it strength, but beware
the pleasureful-overeating of the well- i
nourished, ill-proportioned gourmet. FOOD AND MOOD. ' Now, you could dance a cancan or a break-down however you hated the j world and indigestion surely pro- i
verts to the healthful joys of simple living, of deep breathing, and of high
the , thinking.
Today I w ill tell you about two little movements of the dance that may be done at home without mnsic and to the slower tempo of the walk. Try them for general bodily grace and ease of motion.
me nrst picture snows a very sim-
lOiPLIOATION
OF WOMAN'S ILLS Yields to Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound.
Athens, Texas. "I had a complication of diseases, some of them of long
standing. I wrote to you for advice
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m o - 1
mm
mm
and took Lydia E. Pmkham's Vegetable Compound, and some other thinps that you suggested. I must confess that I am much better in every way and have been relieved of some of the worst troubles. My neigh
bors say I look younger now than I did fifteen years ago." Mrs. Sarah R. WHATLEY, Athens, Texas, R. F. D. No. 3. Box 92. We know of no other medicine which has been so successful in relieving the suffering of women, or received so many genuine testimonials, as has Lydia E. rinkham's Vegetable Compound. In nearly every community you will find women who have been restored to health by this famous medicine. Almost every woman you meet knows of the great good it has been doing among suffering women for the past 30 years. In the Pinkham Laboratory at Lynn, Mass., are files containing hundreds of thousands of letters from women seeking health, in which many openly state over thIrown signatures that they have regained their health by taking Lydio E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, many of them state that it has saved them from surgical operations. If you want special adrice write to Lfdla . Pinkham Medicine Co. (confidential) Lynn, Mass. Your letter will be opened, read and answered by a
ua mem in sinci oouuiaace.
duces misanthropy but. you have to , pe equally pretty figure, and for supbe in harmony with life to express i pleness of arms and legs and waist it poetry in dancing. So, since mood af- counts as strongly as it does for lightfects dancing and food affects mood, ly poised and carried head and body, this little cycle will make the classi-1 Advance w ith the head carried high cal dancer careful of the dower of above the column of the throat and health that spare, sane, sensible eat-1 the lifted chin. Sway slightly from the ing produces. waist as you swing the arms in the For breakfast I have coffee and hot j arc of a circle: left arm is forward milk; for lunch, fruit and one nour-! slightly above the shoulder height as lshlng solid, and my simple dinner is i the weight advances forward to the guiltless of sweets. Clothes I regard right foot, and at the same time the as covering and not as trammeling or- right foot, and at the same time arm is naments that interfere with freedom . stretched back in a straight line and of movement or deep breathing. Per-! lowered from shoulder to wrist until haps if I convert a few of my readers : the hand is just at the line of the hip. to a love for and a belief in the grace- Do this with gradually increasing temful movements of the classic dance, ; po, until the springy walking motion T shall at the same time make con- has become a light dancing step. Fif
teen minutes of this night and morning will give great, grace and resiliency to your ordinary gait. The second picture brings the back and shoulder muscles into play and exercises the throat. In other essentials it has the basic . principles and advantages of the first exercise. Advance as before. This time the forward motion is first on the left and then on the right side of the body and thus great muscular co-ordination Is assured for the devotee of this exercise. Bring the arms up with the elbows close to the waist line and the hands relaxed in easy lines from the wrist. Sway head and arm from side to side as the body pivots slightly from the waist, muscles and the feet advance in the lifted prancing step of the nance "More power to ye," says my neigh bors of Erin's Isle, in kindly greeting. To you my neighbors across the sea I say it too, "More power to you;" and may the principles of the classical dancing I have so earnestly studied and so earnestly love, bring you beauty and grace and power to live iloriously and well.
"Talk About Your Corn-Getters, "GETS-IT" Surely is the Real Thing!" the new-plan corn cure. GETS-1T. Watch it get rid of that corn. wart, callus or bunion In a hurry.' "GETSIT" is as sure as time. It takes two seconds to apply Hint's all. No bandages to stick and fuss over, no salves
j to make corns sore and turn true flesh raw and red. no planters, no more
p -- - j knives and razors that may causA ; t ook & Royd mills w hich formerly blood poison, no more digging at was the oldCox mills, established more h.a n, .it tt.in in
- I . , i ll' i uen cv tutu lit HI" Itnan a cnturv ago bv the creat-crand-1 i 1 . The silver wedding anniversary of! father of Mrs Little From the mill wor,d l USV Hir COI"n day" re OV' Mr. and Mrs. Alitus J. Little, living; the town of Middleboro received its er ';ETS-IT" is guaranteed. It Is north of Middleboro, was celebrated j name of Cox's Mills, which was ehang- Pafe- nver hurts healthy flesh. Sunday. At noon more than seventy-itd a few years ago. Jeremiah Cox i Your druggist sells "GETS-IT." 2Z vLeaae8i8a'fhrf ZZ:tn T? f the pione" Frnds f the cents per bottle, or direct if you wish.
......... i... vitn.wil J I llltlllj (-uum. beautiful gifts to Mr. and Mrs. Little, j
During the afternoon musical selec
tions were given by Miss Maude Nor-'has "th blues," reads James Whit- Co., Charles Magaw. Con key Pnis ris and others. comb Riley's poems until the fit is. Co.
HOLD ANNIVERSARY
from E. Iawreiue & Co.. Chicato.
Mavor Perkins, of Denver. whMi he ' Uieliinnnd by A. G. Luken
Mr. Little is now head miller at the over.
delicacy of her femininity, which was always her greatest charm. Mrs. Baker was critically adjusting the sleeve. "I think there's a little too much fullness here at this under arm seam. Don't you?" Helen nodded absently. Her mind was not on the under-arm seam. She was wondering if Warren when he saw her in this would realize that she was still young and girlish. The very simplicity of the gown recalled some of the youthful dresses of her girlhood when he had first met and loved her. She remembered once, when he was walking beside her, he had reverently touched a fold of her dress. "Such fine, dainty stuff it looks just like you." And her heart beat wildly as she had felt his longing to take her in his arras, and her own to lie there. Could she ever make him feel for her again what he had felt then? "Now, this side of the skirt is just the right length isn't it? Shall I make the other side by this?" WOULD WARREN NOTICE, Again Helen nodded. Would he notice how slight and graceful she looked in this? And how the pale blue brought out the glint of gold in her hair? "Now, that's all," Mrs. Baker unpinned the collar. "You can take it off." As Helen slipped out of the dress, she caught a fleeting glimpse in the mirror of her bare white arm and neck. Oh, if he could only see her as she looked now! She went back to her sewing under the trees and to dream on through the long golden afternoon dreams that were always of Warren and of all their reunion might mean.
A VAGRANT MIND
BY ELLA WHEELER WILCOX. SINCE early this morning the world has seemed surging With unworded rhythm, and rhyme without thought. It may be the Muses take this way of urging Trie patience and pains by which poems are wrought. Ir may be some singer who passed into glory, With songs all unfinished, is lingering near And trying to tell me the rest of the story. Which I am too dull of perception to hear. I hear not, I see not, but feel the sweet swinging And swaying of metre, in sunlight and shade: The still arch of Space with such music is ringing As never an audible orchestra made. The moments glide by me, and each one is dancing; Aquiver with life is each leaf on the tree. And out on the ocean is movement entrancing. As billow with billow goes racing with glee. With never a thought that is worthy the saying. And never a theme to be put into song. Since early this morning my mind has been straying. A vagabond thing, with a vagabond throng. With gay, idle moments, and waves of the ocean. With winds and with sunbeams and treetops and birds, ! has lilted along in the joy of mere motion. To songs without music and verse without words.
Success depends largely upon
booa neann Tn vmir race for success don't loose sicht of the fact that onlv K
through good health can you attain success. The tension you must necessarily place upon your nerves, and the sacrifice of proper exercise you have to make at times must be balanced in some way.
Dr. Pierced Golden Medical Discovery v
u the balancing power a vitalizing power. It acts on the stomach and organs of digestion and nutrition, thus purifying the blood and giving strength to the nerves, indirectly aiding the liver to perform its very important work. Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Ditcovery has been successful for a generation as atonic and body builder. Sold by mdicine dealers in liquid or tablet formtrial box of "Tablets" mailed on receipt of 50 onecent stamps. If in failing health write Dr. R. V. Pierce' faculty at Invalids' Hotel, Buffalo, New York.
Look for the Sign
DR. PIERCE'S 4REAT FAMILY DOCTOR BC01. Th Peopla Common Soae ModicaJ Advisor newly rtrited up-to-date edition of 100S pffo, answers boots of delicato qaeottoos which ovary woman. inIe or married.oocM to know. Seat FREE in cloth binding to ur address on receipt of 31 one-cent stamps, to cover coot of wrapping and mailing only.
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John H. Brown, and Mrs. Smith Ross, of Richmond. The affair was arranged as a surprise to Mr. Stockton, who had gone to the field to cut corn when the guests arrived. Mrs. Stockton is a semi-invalid, so she was apprised of the celebration and entered heartily into the preparation of it. The house was prettily decorated in yellow and white and the table was massed with
yellow cosmos. Mr. and Mrs. Stockton received a number of beautiful presents. Mrs. Jos. A. Day and daughter Theresa, and Mrs. Mary Beelman were among the guests, the latter being a girlhood friend of Mrs. Stockton.
we have ever shown is now on our floor, at most attractive prices. A visit to our store will convince you that Druitt's is the place to buy dining room furniture.
Oregon has 545,000,000.000 feet of i standing timber values at 56-SO.OOO 000. '
NEW PARIS COUPLE CELEBRATE GOLDEN WEDDING JUBILEE
NEW PARIS. O.. Oct. 16. On Wednesday, Mr. and Mrs. John Stockton, living seven miles east of Xew Paris, celebrated their golden wedding anniversary and it was a most enjoyable occasion. Mrs. Stockton is a daughter of Henry Fudge and both Mr. and Mrs. Stockton have lived the whole of their
lifetime near their present place of I
residence. Tnree children were bora to them, two of which are living, Mrs. Lewis Cockerall of Richmond being a daughter. About fifty guests sat down to the golden wedding feast, two of the guests being members of the wedding party "in ye olden time" Mrs.
o
tit of Sorts
THAT IS, something is wrong1 with baby, but we can't tell just what it is. All mothers recognize the term by the la5situde, weakness, Ios3 of appetite, inclination to sleep, heavy breathing, and lack of interest shown by baby. These are the symptoms of sickness. It may be fever, congestion, worms, croup, diphtheria, or scarlatina. Do net lose a minute. Give the child Castoria. It will start the digestive organs into operation, open the pores of the skin, carry off the foetid matter, and drive away the threatened sickness.
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