Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 38, Number 299, 24 October 1913 — Page 10

PAGE TEN

THE KICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN -TELEGRAM, FRIDAY, OCT. 24. 1913.

Married Life the Second Year

By MABEL HERBERT URNER. Helen had been home ten days now. And while these first days of her return had not been all that she had dreamed they would be, still she had been very happy. Though Warren was not as tender and affectionate as she had hoped, yet he was far more considerate of her than he used to be. The heat had been trying, and made him at times more irritable. But she could see he tried not. to vent his displeasure on her. And that had been one of the things that had hurt her most. Whatever the cause of his anger or discomfort, he used always make her feel that it was in some way her fault. That feurfui'y hot evening they had taken the car ride had been the most unfortunate one since her return. "Warren had been undeniably irritable and sullen then. Warren hardly spoke to her on the way home. And she had gone to bed with a heavy heart, fearing that he was relapsing into his old spells of irritability. But he had made up for it the next morning in saying as he started off: "Take it easy today, kitten. Keep as cool as you can, and tonight we'll go to a roof garden. That'll be better than a crowded trolley ride. How about having dinner there?" "Oh, no, Warren, we musn't dine out so much. You know how expensive it is. Let's have dinner here first Just something cold, and then go to the roof afterward." "All right, economical person!" as he pulled at a loose strand of hair. PAYING HER COMPLIMENTS. "Oh, you're mussing me all up!" "You look prettier when you're mussed," brushing her hair loosely over her forehead. "There now, go look at yourself in the glass you look like the girl on the magazine cover." When he had gone she did run to the mirror, and not only was she slightly dishevelled hair becoming, but her cheeks were softly flushed and her eyes shining from Warren's unaccustomed compliment. He so rarely said anything of this "kind to her that she treasured every word. And now she was more than ever glad that since her return she had faithfully kept the promise she had made to herself to always wear a fresh and dainty house gown every morning for breakfast and in every way to make herself as attractive as she could. Her resolve that Warren should never again see her carelessly or unbecomingly dressed, she had so far rigidly kept. And she felt that the rompliment he had paid her this morning was worth al Ithe time and effort It had cost. So instead of spending an unhappy day brooding over his garishness of the night before, just because he had said what he did this morning, everything was "right" again. And she went about her work humming happily. That evening they went to the roof garden, and again the next night. But each day grew hotter than the one before. Warren vowed repeatedly that they

would never spend another summer in

this apartment, but he admitted it

would be better to wait until it was

cooler before they again went apart ment-seeking.

The papers had daily announced that

the morrow would bring relief. But the thermometer kept steadily up

ward now, the eighth day of the heat

wave, dawned hotter than any that had come before. The air wag stifling. Warren had laid all night on a couch in the front room, and Mejen had her bed drawn close under the

window, but neither had slept. Wini

fred too, on her little cot by the nurs ry window, had been most fretful. "Helen" Warren demanded sudden

ly, his chin in the air as he struggled with his collar, "how long will it take you to pack up for a week at the sea-

"A week at the seashore?" "Yes. this thing has reached the limit. We're not going to stay here another night in this heat. We'll be Sick if we do." "But where can we go?" "To one of the hotels at some fcearby beach here's plenty of them." PLANNING THEIR TRIP. "Oh, but can we afford it? You know how expensive it will be?" "It'll be cheaper than having all of tos sick. Now, can you be ready by 5 (tnd we'll go out this evening?" "But Warren " "Well, w-e're going, that's all there Is about it. I don't intend to spend Another night like last night. Now Hon't take a lot of things, just enough for you and Winifred to get along on. J'll be home in time to pack my suitcase." "Now just leave that to me. All you've got to do is to get yourself fcnd Winifred ready by 5 o'clock. Can you do it?" "Oh, yes. of course I can." "Good! I'll be here at 5 sharp. It'll take me about twenty minutes to get jny things together and we'll be out of here by half past. A week at the seashore. In spite of Helen's anxiety as to the expense, ehe was filled with joyful anticipation. Somehow the thought of going away with Warren for a week seemed to renew the romance of their honeymoon. To many women he possiblity of romance in married life ends before the

STRAINING THE MARRIAGE TIE

i By Dorothy Dix

i live. Mrs. Agnes Keller applied to the

court here to compel her husband to

; give her alimony. Her application

was refused.

I'll Jilifc yJm 8

NEWARK Henry O Piatt, a detective in the tenderloin section here. v. - : . . i . i. . . v. . . . . . . .

i men by the amount of powder on their

faces. "Too much powder on a woman's face indicates lack of morals." he says.

! MASONIC CALENDAR ; j Friday, October 24 Kins Solomon i Chapter No. 4. R. A M Called meeting Work in Mark Master degree Saturday, October 2b Loyal Chapter. No 4?. O E. S Called meetir..:. ' initiation and light refreshments.

BALTIMORE Physicians at Si Jooph"s hospital, have succeeded in building a new nose from a human rib. An incision was made tn the side of Lynn Pa vis. a railroad employe, and a piece of cartilage a little over two inches long was cut from the third rib and shaped for the shattered nose bone. The nose is now hi its normal sha;e.

A Gentle and Effective Laxative.

j ..;... . v .. . . . .... ...v ...... trte is what peorle demand when suffering from constipation Thousands 'swear by Dr. King's New Life V:le Hush Tallman. of San Antonio. Tex ; writes: "They are. Nn,'. question, the best rills my wife an.! 1 have - ; er taken." They never cause pa;n. ; Price Recommended by A G. Luken. ! ( A.ivert it llicr.O

Old People Need A Bowel Stimulant

. Look at this picture, all of you disgruntled husbands and wives. It shows a man and a woman straining at the marriage bond, and threatening to tear it asunder, forgetful and heedless of the little children that are being pushed to the wall and crushed tey their fight. It is a tragic picture. It is a sad and terrible picture, yet it might have been painted from real life in an innumerable number of homes. All of us have seen scenes like this. Perhaps we have even posed for the central figure ourselves, that of the angry husband and wife who are ruthlessly sacrificing their children to their own bitter quarrels. You know how it is in such households. Love is dead. The husband is disenchanted with his wife, weary to death of her. Perhaps he has a real grievance against her, and she is foolish, and flighty, and extravagant. The woman is disillusioned about her husband, and has arrived at the place where he gets upon her nerves and everything he says and does irritates her. Perhaps she has a real grievance against him. Perhaps he drinks too much at times, or stays out too late, or he is inclined to be flirtatious. Why should two people who have found marriage a failure perpetuate that failure? they ask. Why should two people who make each other miserable by staying together not part and go their separate ways in peace? they ask. Why should they keep up the mockery of a home after its spirit has fled? they ask. Why have they not

a right to lead their individual lives? they ask. And the answer is, the CHILDREN. Always the answer is. the CHILDREN. From thtir little innocent breasts all the shafts of logic, by which the unhappily married justify divorce fall back blunted and broken. Childless couples who repent of a

sorry matrimonial bargain may break

tims of every divorce. They suffer or separated, but almost invariably

financially when they are deprived of

the comforts and advantages that the money their father -earns should give them. They suffer sentimentally if they are deprived of the love and tenderness, the petting and coddling of a mother. Most of all they suffer morally in being deprived of the rever-

it If thev choose. Thev jeopardize no ence and respect tor tneir parents other interests than their own, but the j tnat is one of the most Potent safei guards against temptation to the

have given hostages to fortune, and voun6

they have no right to consider their own happiness first. Their paramount duty is not to themselves, but to the helpless little creatures that they have brought into the world. The saddest sight in the world is a little orphan child with no father to protect it, no mother to love and cuddle it. The next saddest sight is a halforphan child, a poor little unfortunate that lacks either a father's guidance or a mother's tenderness. That any man or woman would deliberately thrust this cruel fate upon their own offspring is a crime unspeakable. Yet the land is full of forlorn little children who have been orphaned by the divorce court and who have no mother, or no father, or two mothers and two fathers, and whose arithmetic and morals are hopelessly muddled, and who wouldn't know whether to respect father No. 1 or father No. 2, or its old mother or its new mother; if any one should try to teach it the antiquated command about honoring thy father and "thy mother. It is the children who are the vie-

To shake a child's faith in the goodness of its parents is to shake its faith in everything that is fine and noble. Yet how can you teach a girl to be pure if it is a matter of public record that her mother was a light woman? How can you teach a boyhigh ideals if his mother divorced his father for base conduct? It is of these things, and not their own wrongs, that men and women" should think before they break the marriage tie. And it is not alone the husbands and wives who get divorces that wrong their children. Those couples who are continually quarreling and bickering, who flash out bitter taunts and accusations against each other in their children's presence, are equally blameworthy. They also sacrifice their children on the altar of their tempers. Not long ago an officer in the

cally every truant child and every ju

venile criminal came from a home in which there was domestic trouble. Generally the parents were divorced.

the home was a place of discord

Tr-e .nfeience is inescapable the children who come from happy homes in which the father and mother get along peaceably together also behave themselves. They are not juvenile criminals, and so, fathers and mothers if you want your children to grow up into being good men and women you must give them the right sort Of a start.

The Ideal One is a Mild Laxative Tonic That Will Keep the Bowels Gently Active. Healthy old age is so absolutely dependent upon the condition of the bow els that great care shv-uld be taken to see that they act regularly. The fact is that as age advances ihe stomach muscles become wt-ak and inactive and the liver does :.ure up the juices that ' are necessary to prompt digestion. Some help au be ob'air.' ! by eating easily digested foods and by plenty of exercise, but this lav'er is irksome to most eiderly p.ei:; .e. One thing is certain, that a state of constipation should always be avoided, as it Is dangerous to life and health. The best plan is to take a mild laxative as often as is deemed necessary. Hut with ec,ual certainty it is suggested that cathartics, purgatives, j.hy-dos, salte and pills be avoided, as they do but temporary good and are so harsh as to be a shock to a deliacte system. A much better plan and on that thousands of elderly people are following, is to take a gentle laxative-tonic like Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin.

L'-?: . -- :

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MRS. MARY A. P. DAVIDSON. She is TS and because of her sedemV ary habits had continual bowel trouble. From the day she began taking Ilr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin she has had no further inconvenience and naturally she is glad to say kiud thing of this remedy. A bottle can be bought of any druggist at fifty cents or one dollar. People usually buy the fifty cent tdze first, and then, having convinced themselves of its merits, they buy the dollar size, which is more economical. Results are always guaranteed or money will be refunded. Elderly person of both sexes can follow these suggestions with every assurance of good results.

Families wishing to try a free sam-

whieh acts as nearly like nature as is

This can only be done in a real I possible. In fact, the tendency of this home, a home that is full of peace and 1 remedy is to strengthen the stomach love and good will, and where there'B ! and Lcwel muscles and so train them

just one permanent father and one ! to act naturally again, when medicines plj bottle can obtain it postpaid by ad

permanent mother, and where the I or all kinds can usually De aispensea dressing W. B. Caldwell. 419 Washmother teaches the children that the I with. This is the opinion of many ington street. Monticello. III. A pos-

father is the pattern of manhood that people of different ages, among them taj car,j witti your name and address

they must copy, and the father incul

cates into the children's mind that their mother is only a little lower than the angels. Every child has a right to that kind of environment, and no matter how much a man and woman come to hate each other, for the sake of their children they are in duty bound to keep up the fiction of such a hofee until the children are grown and their characters are formed. Look again at this picture, you quarreling husbands and wives. Cut It out and stick it up on your mirror where you will see it when you shave.

or do your hair. Maybe it will make

Mrs. Mary A. P. Davidson, of Univer- on it will do.

sity Mound Home, San Francisco, Cal. Advertisement)

Children's Court made the statement vou think of f hp, holnlona litti nnoa

that investigation showed that practi-Twhose lives you are ruining with your

NO DIFFERENCE

The Proof Is Here the Same As Everywhere. For those who sock relief from kidney backache, weak kidneys?, bladder ills. Doan's Kidney Pills offer hope f relief and the proof is here in Richmond, the same as everywhere. Richmond people have used Doan's and Richmond people recommend Boan's. the kidney remedy used in America for fifty years. Why suffer? Why run the risk of dangerous kidney ills fatal -Bright'B disease. Here's Richmond proof. Investigate it. Mrs. Henry Brokamp. 62 Sherman St.. Richmond lad., says: "We have tised Doan's Kidney Pills with fine results. I am glad to confirm our former public endorsements. This remedy has been ued for backache ajid other Eymptoms of kidney complaint and has never failed to give relief in a short time." For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the United States. Remember the name Doan's and ake bo other. (Advertisement) f

first year, but with Helen two years had not succeeded in crushing it. She was ever trying to make of Warren the lover. And although he was far from that, what he lacked in sentiment her own vivid imagination made up. She was always planning scenes of tenderness and love to be lived through with him, and counless disappointments had not as yet

j crushed out this tendency.

PLEASANT THOUGHTS. And now in this trip to the seashore, she saw many possibilities of hours in which they could be very bapjy. She remembered during their engagement, one wonderful day's trip to the beach, and how they had sat out on the sand in the moonlight and listened to the rushing waves. Yielding to a sudden fancy she had made him give her a pencil and a bit of paper. The back of an envelope was all he had, and she had torn it in two and told him they must each write the things they wished for the most in the world and then bury their wishes deep in the sand, with a little prayer that they would come true. He had laughed and called her a sentimental little kitten, whom he supposed he had to humor. Then she had found two clam shells in the sand and putting the tightly folded bits of paper between them, had buried them deeply. On hers she had written "that he will love me always as much as he loves me now!" Although she had never asked him, she often wondered what he had written. As they left she had tried to mark the place in her

I memory by an imaginary line from a

She smiled now at that fancy, for long ago the waves had washed the shells away. But now all day as she got their things ready for this trip, she dreamed of that wonderful night. And she was filled with fluttering expectancy

I that they were again going to the

oeacn, ana pernaps to me very same place, they would once more sit out on the srnd in the moonlight and listen to the rushinc waves.

! .

NEWS FLASHES FROM EVERYWHERE j

XKW YORK The ashes of Gus Ruhlin the noted pugilist, are being used by his widow in a fight against the re-election of Alderman Otto Gelbe, of Queens county. At a political

rally Mrs. Ruhlin held up the urn containing the ashe's of her husband, and said: "I am here to speak for my dead husband. If Gus were alive he would be here to speak for himself." EDGEWATER Caught in the huge flywheel in the powerhouse here, David Carroll was whirled around till all his clothing came off. He was unin-

Pom

foolish squabbles. Maybe it will make

you resolve to give your children a square deal by giving them a happy home.

jured. JERSEY CITY Because she did not like the town of Vulcanite, N. J., where her husband had decided to

TRY COOPER'S

BLEND COFFEE For Sale at Cooper's Grocery

COLISEUM, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 24 Mr. Bert Kolp presents Mr. Glenn Greenamyer. Violinist, and Miss Olivia Mueller, Pianist In recital Admittance 4o balcony 25c. Assembly for those holding invitation to former aacemblys and all pupils of Mrs. Gertrude Kolp. Programa 50c.

THE PEOPLE'S MODERATE PPJCE DENTAL OFFICE

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Cold Crowns I3.0C Bridge Work 13.CI Full Seta $5.00 Gold Filings $1.00 up Silver Fillings 5Cc up Inlay Work a Specialty. Examination Free. All Work Guaranteed. We not pnly claim, but have Indisputa ble proof of the greatest and mcst perfect method now used for the painless extraction of teeth. New York Dental Parlors 8044 Main St. RICHMOND. INO. Open Evenings.

Delicious Layer Cake

Your cake will be uniformly even in texture, of that soft, velvety consistency that makes it melt in your mouthy if Rumford Baking Powder is used. Rumford makes all cakes so digestible, light and nourishing that it makes perfect cake.

THE WHOLESOME BAKING POWDER

Does Not Contsln Alum BSSBESBKrarr!

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! EATON, OHIO. ! ! Miss Julia Robinson has pone to ' Piqua to spend the winter with a sis

ter. Mrs. S. A. Rossman is in Chicago to spend several days with her daughter, Mrs. Thomas Brooke. Dr. and Mrs. A. A. I.ovett have returned fro man extended triy through the West and Southwest. , C. J. Hunter, representing Bolivar lodge of Eaton, is in Columbus attendin? a meeting of the Masonic Grand lodge. Miss Ethel Bruce is home after an Clifton Williams in Milwaukee. Mrs. C. E. Albright is spending a few days with relatives in Cincinnati. Mrs. Carrie Sands is spending a few days with relatives in Cincinnati. Mrs. Carrie Sands is a guest of relatives at Dublin. Ind. Miss Nellie Nelson has returned from a visit with Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Lucas at Osceola, Mo.

Re-Opening Book Bargain

Fve Big lolwmes

Refluiariy Selling at $12.00. Clip This Coupon

THE RICHMOND PALLMi

Everybody's Cyclopedia DAILY COUPON This coupon, if presented at the main office of the Richmond Palladium, will entitle the bearer to one five-volurae set " of Everybody's Cyclopedia (regularly selling at 512.)

For $1.98

MAIL ORDERS, ADDRESS THE PALLADIUM, RICHMOND, IND. The Sets are too bulky to be sent by mail, but out-of-town readers can have them for the $1.9$, the set to be sent by express, shipping charges to be paid by the receiv er. OUT-OF-TOWN READERS need not wait until the days of distri bution. but send orders any day of the week and shipments will be m ade promptly on the distribution days.

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EGGEMEYER9S Grocery Specials

'of Sataurdlay oily

Two Stores

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BLACK CHERRIES California Ox Hearts Finest Quality Strictly Dessert Goods Sold Always 35c Can Special Price 22c Can

NAPTHA SOAP Fels Brand in Boxes 10 Bars in Box The Very Best Always Sold at 5 Cents Special 10 Bar Box 12 Cents.

SEEDED RAISINS New 1913 Crop Full Pound Pkgs. Highest Quality Sold Always at 15c. Special Now 2 Pkgs. 22 Cents

New Hickory Nuts New Sorghum Molasses New Flake Hominy

COUNTRY GENTLEMAN CORN New 1913 Pack Hljrhe.-t Quality A Regular 15c Seller Bijou Brand 6 Cans. 60c; 3 Cans. 35c

EVAPORATED CORN New 13 Goods Genuine Sugar Finest Quality Perfectly Prepared 6 Pkgs. 65c; 3 Pkgs. 35c

SPAGHETTI AND MACARONI Golden Egg Brand A Fine Quality Assorted As You Like Regular 10c Sizes Special. 2 Days, 2 Pkgs. 15c

New Norwav Mackerel New Buckwheat Flour New Sour Kraut

GRANULATED SUGAR Finest Cane. Quality Franklin Brand In Clean Cloth Bags Free from Dirt & Splinters 25 Pounds Net Weight $1.19 Per Bag

MACKEREL Breakfast Size Genuine Norway s They Are Small, but Fine A New Barrel 1913 Pack 6 Fish 25 Cnts v

KIEFER PEARS Good Size Have a Fine Color Especially Cheap 100 Bushels While They Last 60c a Bushel

401 & 403 j rb Effoemeyer & Sons 101741019 MAHJ QTPPFT tU MAIM STRF.FT

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