Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 38, Number 297, 22 October 1913 — Page 10

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PAGE TEN THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, WEDNESDAY, OCT. 22. 1913. MY OWN BEAUTY SECRETS By Anna Heidi Unfortunate Girls Find Shelter: in Home For Friendless Wo As

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Married Life the Second Year By MABEL HERBERT URNER. "I believe it's cooler in the dining room than here. We can open the hall door and get a breeze through." "It isn't cool anywhere, and this apartment's the limit. There's no ventilation in these rooms at all; they're jammed right up against that brick wall. We'll not stay here another summer, I can tell you that!" "But, Hear, this is unusually hot weather; we've never had it like this. Yesterday was the hottest day in tv r 1- ar.-. Wasn't that what the paper.; said?" "'-, i nt this place is unsufferable. -It's lii-iKr than my office, and that's had Mioui-h. Get on your things, and we'll no out for a car ride. I'm not going ro swelter here all evening." "But dear, what about Winifred?" "Have .Mrs. O'Grady come up and etay with her." Helen hesitated. She disliked leaving her with the janitor's wife and yet

it was too hot to drag her around a j 8encer gjr night like this. i

assumes the

Hands are so much in evidence it is important for every woman to try to make hers attractive. Leaning on the elbow looks quite attractive when a pretty,

pose. But it is

"Well, if you wan to stay you can, lint I'm going out. You've been cooped ut) here all dav. I should think

j ti ii iiht" mi i,ci a mil- an. . , .

"Oh, you know I would, I'd love to! 1 was only thinking about Winifred." when a stout "Well, get Mrs. O'Grady. She's glad J to sit here a couple of hours for SO , woman takes cents.

i it, and, in any

ALL CARS CROWDED. Helen telephoned flown to Mrs. O'Grady, who came up at once. "While .shall we go?" asked Warren, when a little later they reached the street. "Take the ear to One Hundred and Twenty-fifth street and tome back on the Riverside bus?" "Oh, that would be lovely!" "All right, here comes a car!" But the car was crowded, there was Hot a scat and several were standing. "No use tring to get on there, we'll have to wait for the next." But the next was even more crowded. Warren swung his cane impatiently. "That's the trouble in trying to get anywhere in Xew York. You always have to go with the rabble." "Wait, dear, maybe there'll be some seats on the next one," said Helen hopefully. It was several minutes before another came. There was just two seats on the rear platform. Two workmen in their shirt sleeves and a colored boy were the other occupants. "But it isn't so bad, dear," said Helen. "You really do get a better viewon the back seat than anywhere in Ihe car, and it's cool back here. Warren hung his hat on his cane and ran his flutters through his hair. "It's better than that stuffy apartment. Helen, we've really got to get nut of there. I meant what 1 said. I'm not going to spend another summer in that place." "But Warren, where can we go? We ran't get anything else for what we are paying there." "Why can't we? There are plenty of apartments in New York." "But you know the agent made us a special rate on that, and I heard that the first of October they're going to raise all the apartments $10 a month

case, it will give you ugly, coarse pads at the elbow Break yourself of the habit and in the meantime rub the elbows each night with lanoline. Never use highly scented soaps. Never wear tight wristbands or cuffs, and be sure that your dresses always have plenty of room in the armholes. If you follow these careful directions, madame, I think you will

to anvone eomintr in. Onlv those who

have leases can renew them at the ' find yourself

tsame rates." "Nonsense! They can't get any

more than they are getting for those

flats. "Why, yes. Warren, they're cheap, wo have six rooms and a bath for $70. And for that neighborhood, that's very low. I don't believe wc could get anything else for that." "Of course you can, it's only a matter of looking. You can get anything

if you look for it long enough and go after it right. As soon as this heat lets

Hp a little' we'll go some afternoon and

size up a few places. There," he point

ed to some large apartment houses

they were passing. "Those look like j pretty decent places, and I'll wager :

the rooms would be cool, too."

"But dear, do you want to come up

po far?

'Well, if I take the subway a few i

possessed of a pair of supple, graceful white hands and arms. And either in motion or in repose, they will add to the tout ensemble of true beauty.

friore stations don't, matter.

"All out! Car ahead!" shouted the conductor. . Warren muttered some thing about the wretched service of the surface cars. They managed to get a seat in the car a herd, but at the next corner nome people crowded in and stood in front of them. "Come!" Warren rose angrily. "I'm not going to stand for this. Let's get out and walk it's only a few blocks further." They climbed out, making their way with difficulty past a stout woman with a baby on her lap and a man with his legs crossed. "That's the last time we"ll take that line," declared Warren more and more ..irritated at each discomfort. "But it'll be lovely going back on the bus. It's so beautiful along there hy the river," said Helen soothingly. She was anxiously trying to make their outing a pleasant one. He so often made her feel that It was her fault if things went wrong. They walked slowly over to Riverside Drive. "Here, we get the 'bus over on this side. Jove, look at that crowd waiting!

INDIGESTION. GAS OR SICK, SOUR STOMACH Time "Pape's Diapepsin!" In Five Minutes All Stomach . Misery is Gone.

.j..;..:.

In France we consider a beautiful, expressive arm and hand one of woman's great charms. Do you not think this beauty is well worth your cultivation? Hands are so much in evidence it is important for every woman to try to make hers attractive. Of course, the foundation for all the beauty is cleanliness. Grooming and care will make the skin of your arms and hands smooth and clear. Shapeliness is also within your reach. And if you will but cultivate grace and expressiveness, you may master beauty of the hands and arms. In France we admire gesture and expression through a certain amount of free motion. To you repose is essential for the hands. But the grace of repose is a thing that requires study. Allons! We proceed. Bathe the arms in bran water using the bags of "son" as 1 told you in my talk about the bath. Lave the arms in warm, but not extremely hot water, lest an undue amount of blood be called to the hands giving them an unsightly red appearance. Now beginning at the shoulder rub

Wi W X3v "fcW f?y-v wfc! n v x. s'! - . - -Ori Sf fib :Mm&i ! ' ' ' ii-f$ v p j'

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iditions have grown bet-, postal the home, and now r.ishing ratrt in Richmond comfortabH sttll t t-re u

"Moral con

ter at an astonishing

nen a comparison is miveu m iu- ..iw. .

number ef unfortunate girls in the hus -t le week- th:efc Home for Friendless Women now and lar l'.r.e nJ the number which were usually there j "There a'.o art- a ntnr.be,thirty years ago." was the statement . i,t;s th rt, uho XVIM.:. t.f todav of Mrs Kltzabeth Candler, pro- . bat ion officer and city missionary, and ! " th" 1"''!1- "' tor thirty. two years a member of the i ital ic band OfT. t: ; . ro;ish luard o: trustees of the home. ithis i:t hi d-t:i r- o:r. . At one t.me there were thirty-five J and with n iJf- '' h c-h unfortunate girls in the home. Now go. When th are . there are eUivm more than two mi- J home, th. y see the rVrtuv.ate airls at the institution at the i tution an.', are btt.-s v r"

I'.ine. . ' The Homo for Friendless Women i "We exptcl th,- d.::..':o;t is the trea'est institution tn Rich-j Tuesday to be the ! . t :a t . .,,iri,, .. . i n.r -Kw- of the intnuti.ir. A '. :

can ajipreciate it. however, unless they 1 farmers alas rvmr.d u Tt3rt

have taken an a. live inteiest in it. ; I-hhI. cb'tning ar. n;on-. tu

UT a

Thre is more opportunity for social people seem to Know t reteii'.i work tlure than any other institution Hower. c nla. . in the c:tv ! merchants and a f.

"tlnly this .vk a family was turn- ways r-nnmtr th. , .1 out of its lioin.v Some one sug- j ute towards it."

ad

DeLesseps Dream of the Canals-

Ended in Deep Disgust to Fr

Soli I. and Kameses U thoueht of a canal to marry the seas Thy reigned in Fgvpt between and 1300 H. ('. A waterway actually was constructed by them from the Nile to

laid low in t!se t.op:ta J."i6 outside Hst es'imat total death score at 20.000 - as horrified. When the work stopped 7; of the remaining workers we

Lake Timsah. and thence to the Red j pitals. Sea i Financial Tr?gedy. That canal was choked by sand. A ; On the financial side hi new canal was started by Necho. the tragedy. Kxamination pro son of Fsammeticus I . in H t'.. 00. S26O.OtM.00O had been ic i. It was not finished until 46 H . peiub d The number of sto

w nen iiarius nysiaspis oroKe uowii ( n anim -i ;'".'"". ijj ih.. iivi-oi ami let th waters of the : nenditure HS.tH'tO.oa had bet-!

seas flow into union. Again, in time, the Panama railroad. AnotS

the sands triumphed. ; 000.000 had been spent on th

Centuries lapsed before finally Ferd-' In Faris $7S.0OO.00O ha.i bee

inand de LesseDs pointed a final tri- in "dividends" to the investoi

umphant wav across Suei. , not a penny had been came

This had an important bearing on : Revelations that followe1

the project at Panama. Suez proved France with humiliation, tl the value of such a project. i civilized world with amazem - What De Lesseps succeeded in do- ' chief financial anent had ing at Suez he tried to do at Panama ft.000.om francs in comniin and failed. sale of stock, and for "publ

Work Begun in 1876. (other other work for bribery I France began her brave and futile Another financial agent i I project in Panama in 1876. In 1879 ; 000 franca for services and

De Lesseps took charge. In 18S0 the ; sions. first dirt flew . That w as the tragedy j Charles de Iesseps confe1 of it. No preparation, no protection ; he had paid one agent fiOO.C for the working army from the deadly , because of his great Influence tropic sun, from the deadlier tropic government. The French sickness. j public works admitted that tr It was a civil company. Funds were j cepted a bribe of 375,000 fi raised by popular subscription in J paid over "5.000 francs, oi France. De Lesseps estimated the .'money, to the man who ha

need of $120,000,000. Much of the j him to accept the bribe

money was raised by government lottery. The whole French nation went into a game of chance. In nine years 1.041 patients died of yellow fever at the Ancon hospital. All were white persons and nearly all French. Outside the hospital the

Ferdinand de 1 -essops ann

Charles were sentenced to w five years in prison. The y against the so nwas subseqij nulled. That against the U never executed. impoverii -

j heartened, De Iessepa. the

EACH NIGHT RUB GLYCERINE. WITH A BIT OF CAMPHOR OF CARBOLIC ACID

AND ROSE WATER (YOU

deaths from yellow fever numbered ; eight years old. died in

2,082. Other diseases in the nine years J 1894.

1

with Frank Crooks. Frank tied marble tablets to Crooks' doorbell with the inscription. "Here lies the crook that stole my pocketbook." CHICAGO Kx-Governor Hadley, of Missouri, today told the representatives of the railroad systems in the Mississippi valley that he would not accept the $25,000 a year job offered him for five years if acceptance of it meant his living in Chicago. He desires to remain in Missouri to oppose Senator Stone for re-election.

ST. PKTKRSBURG A telegram received from I-odz today stated that a man named Baggnivn. who is under

WILL BE THE BEST JUDGE 1 arrest there, has confessed murdering

MISS ANNA HELD

gently with a good cold

OF WHICH MIXTURE BEST AGREES WITH YOUR SKIN), ON HANDS AND ABOUT THE CUTICLE OF THE NAILS. THEN DON THE LOOSE GLOVES AND LET THE SOFTENING EFFECT OF YOUR GLYCERINE PREPARATION GO ON.

down very

cream. If the elbow is unsightly with callous skin or goose flesh make up your mind that you must break yourself of the American habit of leaning on the elbow. Leaning on the elbow looks quite attractive when a pretty slender girl assumes the pose. But it is most unsightly when a stout woman takes it, and in any case it will give you ugly, coarse pads at the elbow. Break yourself of the habit, and in the meantime rub the elbows each night with lanoline. ALWAYS RUB DOWN. Always rub down in cultivating beauty of either arm or hand. By following the downward sweep of the

of various emotions with the hands powder on the nails and polish with and arms. Study arranging th fingers i th buffer. gracefully and yet not loosely from Each night rub glycerine, with a the wrist to acquire the power to re- ; bit of camphor, or of carbolic acid lax them easily. j and rose water (you will be the best And now, to crown vonr efforts, have judce of which mixture best agrees , . , ,, , , , i with vour skin), on hands and about your hands always well groomed and , . ,., f tho xhtin dnn thA

clean. j If you cannot afford a weekly niani- j cure, purchase manicure tools an or- j anpe wood stick or two, a flexible tile, ' some chamois buffers, a bottle of peroxide, castile soap and good cold cream. To this add a pair of loose chamois gloves, some finser-tip squeezers, glycerine and some well-recommended article that will give lustre to the nails. After filing, soak your hands in

circulation you will acquire the great-1 warm soap suds to which you have est possible shapeliness and get the adde da few drops of benzoin. When

tapering line of hand and arm that is

essential to their true beauty. Swing very light dumb-bells or Indian clubs to acquire flexible, grace.

ful motion of the hand or arm. Lift the i

they are soft and clean, push the cuti

cle back with a towel and cleanse under the nails with the orange wood stick dipped in peroxide. Not only must the nals be free from

loose gloves and let the softening effect of your glycerine preparation go on. IN THE MORNING. In the mcrning shape the fingers by applying the squeezers to the fingers in alteration. Massage the fingers toward the tips, and be sure to keep the joints supple and smooth. When on the street always wear cloves that are large enough for you. When in a building remove the gloves at lonce, so that no perspiration stiffen the glove or chap the hand. Never use hichly scented soaps. Never wear fieht wristbands or cuffs, and be sure that your dresses always have plenty of room in the arm-holes. If you follow these careful direc

tions, madame, I think you win nna

Andrew Tushinsky, the kieff boy. whose death resulted in the charge of a "ri'ual murder" against Mendel Beilis. The ministry of justice has ordered an inquiry.

PRINCETON Strong agitation has been aroused by the college authorities

r

against the "treating" han "now have one on me" custois drinking to excess, according. Bruce, editor of the Princetot

LAWYER FORCIBL

EJECTED FROM

LONDON. Oct. 22. A sent caused in the high court j Rufus Isaacs was being wf lord chief justice of Great when a barrister named OakR seated among the spectators,, leaped to his feet and iij Iord Haitians, who was eulo retiring lord chief justice, L stone, who retdgned. The laseized and forcibly ejected f court room t

Verhoyansek, in northeast is the coldest inhabited tow world. The winter minimum, grees below zero.

arms first to the sides, then straight I dust and soil and spots o fall sorts, ' vourself possessed of a pair of supple,

up in front of you, then to the shoul- but the flesh under them must shine ' graceful white hands and arms. And. der level. In each position flex the clear white through the translucent either in motion or in repose, they will wrist, and turn the hand on the wrist nails. arid to the tout ensemble of true as a pivot. Try expressing your idea Now rub a bit of lustre-cream or beauty.

"Really docs" put bad stomachs in order "really does" overcome indigestion, dyspepsia, gas, heartburn and

sourness in five minutes that just that makes Pape's Diapepsin the largest selling stomach regulator in the world. If what you eat ferments into stubborn 'lumps, you belch gas and eructate sour, undigested food and acid; head is dizzy and aches; breath foul; tongue coated; your insides filled with bile and indigestible waste, remember the moment "Pape's Diapepsin" comes in contact with the stomach all such distress vanishes. It's truly astonishing almost marvelous, and the joy is its harmlessness. A large fifty-cent case of Pape's Diapepsin will give you a hundred dollars' worth of satisfaction or your druggist hands you your money back. It's worth its weight in gold to men and women who can't get their stomachs regulated. It belongs in your home should always be kept handy in case of a sick, sour, upset stomach during the day or at night. It's the quickest, surest and most harmless Stomach doctor in the world. Adv.

We might have known there's be no chance in a hundred of getting a seat." Helen's heart sank. She dreaded the effect of anything further to irritate him. A 'bus came up now already crowded. Only two people got down, and fifty struggled to take their places. "Perhaps the next won't be so crowded," she tried to say it hopefully. "Nonsense! They're all just like that. If we'd had any sense we'd have thought of it. This is a nice pleasure trip for a summer evening." disagreeably. "Come on; we might as well go back the way we came. It's no use waiting here. "Oh, do wait, dear, for just one more. Here it comes now. You see, they're running them often." But it too. was crowded, and there was a mad rush for the one vacated seat on top. "Come on!" Warren started off. "It's no use waiting around here. Look at that mob of people; they'd fill a dozen "busses. But we won't go back by the line we came up on, that's certain. We'll go over and take the crosstown car to Madison Avenue." He stalked angrily on ahead. They waited on the corner by a dingy saloon from which came the odor of stale beer. They could see a number of crosstown cars standing at the end of the line dow n by the ferry. At

length one came toward them. Warren stepped to the side of the track, but it clanged on by without stopping. "Why on earth didn't he stop? They've got to stop at this corner." "Oh. never mind, dear, here comes another." Warren shook his cane at this, but it too passed without stopping. By this time he was boiling with rage. "Perhaps they don't stop here. Hadn't we better go down to the ferry and get one?" suggested Helen timidly. "No, we'll get one right here! This is the far corner the place they have to stop. I'll stop the next car or know the reason why ! " As the next one approached Warren started forward to plant himself in the middle of the track, when the car drew up on the other corner, and they were forced to make an undignified rush to get it. "What on earth is the matter with you fellows?" Warren spluttered as he gave the conductor the fare. "Two cars whizzed by me without stopping. You're supposed to stop on the far corner why don't you do it?" The conductor shrugged his shoulders indifferently, and rang up the fares without deigning any answer. "By George! I'U report that insolent

fellow! These conductors are a lot of blamed ruffians. If I had my way I'd i fire nine-tenths of them." j Helen said nothing, fearing she would only irritate him more. And he ! i rode the rest of the w ay in sulk-n si- '

lence. And as Helen eazed out into the street, she asked herself why must so

'many of their outinss end like this?, i Why was he so easily irritated? Why' j did he spoil so much of their pleasure j in this way? ;

them, saying these faces on the watch crystals distracted the attention of the employes from their duties. OXFORD When the local tax collector refused to accept checks profrered to him, the taxpayers planned revenue and paid their obligations in pennies. Twelve thousand pennies poured in on the first day.

NEWS FLASHES FROM EVERYWHERE

! NEW YORK Anna White, a servant ' girl employed in the family of Walter ! B. Walker, a wealthy architect, was ' awarded $7,ooo damages against the : architect's son, Walter, whom she ac- ; cused of striking her when she reproved him for helping himself to jam.

BAYONNK Charles Frank a marble worker, was s-r.t to the insane asylum for usinc stone tablets for his correspondence. Following a quarrel

Until a short time ago, scarcely one person in a thousand hac ever tasted a really good sod cracker as it came fresh anc crisp from the oven. Now everybody can know anc enjoy the crisp goodness o: fresh baked soda crackers without going to the baker's oven Uneeda Biscuit bring the bak ery to you. A food to live on. Stamina for workers. Strength for the delicate. Give1 them to the little folks. Five cents

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NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPAN

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; CHICAGO Pictures of wives, sweethearts, mother or babies on the crystals of watches carried by engineers, j conductors and other employes of the j Illinois Central railroad, are no lonei er permitted. Officials cf the road i handed down an order today against

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