Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 38, Number 304, 30 October 1913 — Page 10

rrfE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN -TELEGRAM. THURSDAY, OCT. 30, 1913

Married Life the Second Year

THE COQUETTE

By Nell BrinkleyKolp Comes to Defense of Tango

By MABEL HERBERT URNER. "Now, father, what are you going to have? Mother, what do you want? "I haven't my glasses, Warren," pushing back the dinner card beside her plate. "And you know I never like to order." "Well, we'll have some clams to begin with. Then how about some sweetbreads or broiled bluefish? Oh, here's chicken curry. That's fine, if it's made right. Would you like that, mother? Do you like anything with curry?" "Oh, yes, very much." "Good! turning to the waiter, who stood, attentive, with pad and pencil. "We'll have that chicken curry, with rice. And don't forget the chutney you serve that with it, don't you?" "Yes, sir." "Then we'll have some asparagus Ilollancaise. No, that's too rich with the curry you'd better make it vinegrette." Helen kept, her eyes fixed on the menu. The chicken curry was Jl.5 a portion and the asparagus 90 cents, and it would take two portions of each. It had been the same way at breakfast and at luncheon. But she had made no comment, she tried not to

tjhow that, she noticed how much Warren was spending and how needlessly. And his father was letting him do it all. So far, he had paid for nothing except at luncheon h- had tipped the boy who checked thHr hats, but that was all. AN EXPENSIVE WEEK-END. Helen hart tried not to dwell on the thought of what this week-end visit of his people would cost. And yet, in her mind, she was constantly adding up the amounts they had spent so far. The three meals, the dinner last night. (Saturday) and the breakfast and luncheon today, she knew had already counted up to over $15. For, in Hpite of her resolution, she had each time glanced swiftly at the check. And now, with this dinner tonight and breakfast tomorrow morning, besides the drive and all the incidentals, it would amount to over $30.00. Was it fair? When he knew how rigidly she would have o economize on next month's household expenses to make up for it? Helen had felt that it was more than they could afford to go to the seashore at all this summer, but Warren had insisted it. would be cheaper than doctor bills. But she had not dreamed that he would add to the expense by inviting his people down as his guests for a week-end. Helen tried to talk, tried to enter Into the spirit of things; for she knew Warren would be furious if she seemed anxious or quiet. But the food almost choked her. She could think only of what it was costing, and to how much better use they could put all the money they were spending today. When, at length, the dinner was over and the check was brought involuntarily, against her will, she gave one Bwift glance toward it. Six dollars and something! She did not get the other two figures. And she would not glance again. Six dollars! That would have paid their grocery bill for almost a week. She kept her eyes determinedly averted on her fingt-r bowl when the waiter brought the clncine, for it always incensed Warren have her glance at the tip. "Well, are we all ready?" asked Warren, as he returned his wallet to his hip pocket. "Where shall we go now?" HELEN TRIED WEAKLY TO INTERPOSE. "Oh, dear, we've been going all day. I'm afraid you'll wear Mrs. Curtis out," said Helen, hoping that nothing more would be suggested. "Nonsense! You're not tried, are you, mother?" "Oh, no," Mrs. Curtis smiled complacently. "This sea air is so bracing, I can do a great deal more than I could at home." "Of course, you can, and we're going to do a lot more tonight. Come on, "as he led the way out, giving the hat boy at the door a quarter. Helen tried to, crush down the feeling of resentment that was rising stronger and stronger within her. Surely it was not necessary for him to go to any further expense tonight! "How about that concert down here Sackendroff's Orchestra? They say It's pretty good. Like to try it?" "Why, yes, we might," assented his father. "What do you say, mother," turning to his wife.

"Well, then, you all go and let me .

Ko back to tne notel to mitred, interrupted Helen feeling that she could not see Warren spend any more money tonight, without showing her disapproval. "Winifred's all right." answered Warren shortly. "The nurse girl is with her." "Yes, I know, but I think I'd rather po hack anyway, I'm beginning to feel tired." "Tired? If mother's not tired, you can't be. Come on. don't always object to everything." And Helen, knowing that to protest further would only irritate him. said no more. "Sackendroff's Celebrated Orchestra assisted by Miss Louise Richards and Mr. Elmer F. Frazer." announced the billboard at the entrance. "Four good seats." demanded Warren at the ticket window. "Let's see vhere are those? Oh, all right. How much?" Helen could not hear the answer,

Delightful and Also Abused Dance

a medium as the modern tango To condemn the dance for the fault of the dancer is matuft-s-tly unfair, and et that is precisely what ha lon done in the case of the tanco. Destined To Survive. Through its own beauty the la.ico

deed if thev could see the way it I 1 is destined to ure ai ine unjust danced in the American ball room and j critiots-m that has been leveled on the stae of this country. .against it and when u comes to be The tango as most of us know it is, properly understood. 1 vent ire to prnone other than the one step and is diet that it will be just as much rv danced to the most rolickmg and rag- j peered as the walti which our cranjtv two-sten music. In its natnc coun- mothers used to dame with so much

BY BERT KOLP. The tango is one of the most delightful, ytt. at the same time most abused dance of the present day. It was oricin;;v the national dance of

the Argentine, but the natives of that i

country would be much surprtsed in

A good little mother, whenher wee kid does a cruel thing, takes the little savage up on her gentle knee and explains to him that he has hurt a living thing as he would not like to be hurt, and so, before he catches Bepo's tail tip in the door he must look hard at his own. small pink finger and think if he would like it pinched also in the closing door! But if her little savage is too little too newsome, too near to the wild state that looks almost always from little children's eyes, with the tang of the barbarian of ages gone still clinging about his small fatness then she has another way of nipping cruelty out of this pain-blind blossom of hers. Haven't you heard her? "Little boy, dear, let mother tell you this: Be kind to everything that lives and moves, for what you do shall come back to you some day. one way or another. If you hurt and torment, then some day you will suffer, too."

But who ever turns a laughing, lovely girl about and says to her: "My dear, flirting may be fun, playing at love may seem a harmless sport, but let me tell you this: Whoever deliberately dangles poor Love by his frail wings just to see him squirm will be held up some day by her own opalescent maiden wings. Who torments Love and smiles shall some day hold that hurt in her own heart and have to smile." You may see this picture as your own fancy likes just a pretty image of all womankind, wicked and angel-good, tender and thoughtless, innocent and worldly wise, all lovely woman, teasing Dan Cupid or (as I mean it) the deliberate coquette, in whatever shape she be, tormenting and playing with a lovely thing that she has come upon. NELL BRINKLEY.

try it is danced t-lowly and gracefully

to a special music that is almost weird in sound and with never the suspicion of a "rag."

Many Figures To Dance. There are eight original figures to 1 the dance although there are at least ; twenty authentic tigures which may i properly tind a place in the tango, j One of the reasons for its steadily in- I creasing popularity is the tact that i there i no established order in i

which the f.gures follow one another, so that the dancer may remain on the floor to the limit of his endurance without suffering the slightest monotony. I am sure that those who have protested so strongly against the tango are now beginning to realize that it has not been the dance but the dancers who have been at fault. 1 am fully convinced that the pendulum of popular approval will soon swing the other way so that it will receive commendation rather than protest. Suggestive actions of tango dancers which have aroused so much discussion would be quite out of the ques

tion if tango dancers would remember that in no figure of the dance is it necessary for the gentleman to come closer proximity to his partner than four inches. Hugging may be a perfectly permissible undertaking but it forms no part of the tango when danced properly. Indeed if the dancer wishes to dance in a suggestive manner the old fashioned waltz presents just as available

grace WTwn the old fashioned harmless waltz was first introduced, a storra of popular protest arose from the people who were shocked at the idea of such a darinc dance The present tango is not nearly so long a step m advance of the time as was the w alti when it first appeared.

the immigration of Austrias liable to military serves. At the Instance of the British government the British ambassador demanded that information upon which the arrests were made be shown him for communication to London, and this was done.

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NEW YORK, Oct. 30. Federal Judfje Chatfield today appointed receivers for the "Sealshipt Oyster company," commonly known as the oyster trust. The firm failed to pay interest on $2,500,000 bonds.

CHICAGO. Oct. SO. Jane Addams, known internationally because of her social reform work, touay admitted she had been receiving amorous letters for two years from a man who signed himself "Henry Leuker." She said she had never seen the man and believed him insane.

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Girlish Complexion Now Easily Acquired "A skin of blended snow, cream and rose" is the way an Ohio correspondent describes her newly acquired complexion. She is one who has adopted mercolized wax in place of cosmetics, massage, steaming and other methods. Many who have tried this marvelous wax report that its effects are quite different from those of any other treatment. It produces a complexion of exquisite girlish naturalness, rather than one bearing evidence of having been artificially "made over." One that is indeed "Nature's own," the result of srraduallv absorbing dead nar.

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but she saw Warren thrust a bill through the window and get the tickets and another bill in return. They must have been a dollar each then, working it out in her mind, and he had given five dollars and received one in return. But then came the thought that they might have been two dollars! The bill he had given could have been ten, and the bill returned a two which would make the four tickets eight dollars, two dollars apiece. Could they have been that much! Inside she scanned he program, but no scale of prices was given. Their seats were in the sixth row from the front when at a concert the very last seats of the balcony were just as good. Had they been two dollars each. Her eyes were on the stage, but her thoughts were trying to solve out the prices of those tickets. It was a fairly large orchestra. The leader, a small, swarthy man with a fierce mustache was wielding his baton vigorously, his whole body swaying in unison. The number ended with much applause, which the leader acknowledged with repeated bows. "Now we're to have 'Miss Louise Richards in an aria from Lucia," announced Warren, reading from the program. In a few moments Miss Richards made her entrance in a white satin gown with white roses in her hair. She was very stiff and very affected and sang in a voice hat was clear and well trained, but without the slightest sweetness or charm. "What on earth are you looking so glum about." demanded Warren under cover of the applause. "Why, I didn't know I was." murmured Helen. "You've been going around looking mopy and gloomy all day. Are you trying to spoil everybody's pleasure as well as your own?" "Oh, Warren, don't don't say that." rolling and unrolling her program with nervous fingers. "Well, for heaven's sake cheer up! Have something to say! You're not a funeral, you know." HAD SHE DONE WRONG. Here the applause died out and Warren turned back to his father. Helen kept her eyes on the program she was rolling tightly. Was that true?

Had she shown her feeling in that way -when she had tried so hard not to? Was she. after all. to blame? During all the rest of the concert Helen kept asking herself that. Would another wife, under the same circumstances have put all thought of expense aside and enjoyed the day? Was she mercenary that she could not do this? Was it mercenary to resent such needless expenditures, when she knew they must be paid for by her own rigid economies?

FATALITIES

The following astonishing statistics have been vouched for: Two hundred and thirty workmen are killed or injured. One workman is killed every fifteen minutes. One workman is injured every six

teen seconds. Every year 2,035,000 workmen are killed or injured. Every year the financial loss on account of these deaths and injuries

; amounts to $250,000,000. j A correspondent of the Evening 1 ing Telegraph sends the following I words, which are posted at the en- ! trance of a large industrial concern: ' "The prevention accidents is one of your most important duties." j Continuing, he says: This business concern ( the Ameri- ; can Bridge company) has discovered (the commercial loss and loss of hu- ; man life due to accidents. Every otner wide-awake business concern in ! the country has made the same dis- ! covery. j All of them realize that at least 90 ; per cent of all accidents are due to ; the carelessness of some one, and all j are making great efforts to prevent ithis loss. They are endeavoring to in- ' st:l into the minds of their workers j the necessity for exercising real care

and earnest watchfulness in whatever task they have assigned to them. It is a hopeful sign and indicates a tendency to better things. A large part of the present high cost of living may be attributed to this awful loss through accidents.

! The manufacturer has found it nec

essary to include it as a very important item in figuring his costs.

ons. Leuker is apparently well bred and has a good education.

WASHINGTON, Oct. 30. Vice President and Mrs. Marshall" will leave Washington tomorrow lor Phoenix, Ariz., where Mrs. Marshall's mother resides. The vice president said today he hopes to prolong his absence until late in November.

LADIES! SECRET TO DARKEN GRAY HAIR

LAST MINUTE NEWS FROM MANY POINTS

NEW ORLEANS. Oct. 30. Because he wrote letters to Jane Addams of Chicago, protesting his undying devotion and threatening to commit sui-

j cide, Henry Leuker, aged 30, has been arrested as a dangerous and suspicious j character. When officers entered Leui ker's room they found a loaded revolver, a razor and several other weap-

KANSAS CITY. Oct. 30 Resolutions adopted by the national council of Congregational churches here today by unanimous vote declared for international peace and ajfked President Wilson and congress to disband the army and navy and cease building warships or obtaining munitions of war. About 600 church people from all over the United States were present this morning.

VIENNA, Oct. a0. The British ambassado to Austria-Hungary today began an investigation of the arrest of officials of the Canadian Pacific railway who are charged with promoting

A T

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fecial Sale of

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Wcstcott Hotel Siia?ng

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