Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 38, Number 307, 3 November 1913 — Page 8
PAGE E1UHT
Married Life the Second Year BY MABEL HERBERT URNER.
"There!" throwing down the pack-! ige he had brought from town. J That's the best I coul do." I "Why Warren," (Helen felt the par-j
tel Inquiringly) "YY nere'8 me irame work? This must only be the netting.". "That's all. I forgot those blamed department stores closed at 5, so I flldn't get there until half past." "But 1 thought you knew all the big Stores clohctl early during the sumBier? "Wrll, I didn't. But I was bound not to go through another night down here Without souk; sort of mosquito net, so I went ovtr to Third Avenue and got that." "And wouldn't you get anything with the franiswt rl ?" "V( uldn't I have got it if I could?" "But how can we put this up?" "Pattf.ii it over the bedposts." llele.i had unwrapped the package by this time and disclosed some coarse green netting. "Oh, Warren, green?" "Yts, green! We're not getting it for decorative purposes are we? That's all they had, and I was mighty lucky to get that." "But this is so course the mosquitoes will go right through this. "No, they won't. That'll keep 'em out all right." "But it isn't wide enough, is it, to go across the bed?" "That's the way it comes in eight
yard pieces. You're to cut it in two and sew the lengths together." After dinner, while Warren smoked his cigar and talked to the Stevens, on the veranda, Helen went up to their room to sew up the netting. The mosquitoes, which has not been so bad during the past week they were there, had in the last few nights become unbearable. "Almost through?" demanded Warren when he came up later. "Yes, almost. But it's such stiff, unmanageable stuff it's hard to handle." Warren, already in his shirt sleeves now took off his collar and shoes and sat down to finish his cigar. "George! It was hot in town today. I saw three horses down on my way from the office to the subway." "Oh, those poor work horses," murmured Helen. "The heat is so fearfully hard on them." "Ye it's pretty tough." "Now! dropping the netting on the floor as she rose to put away thimble and thread, "I'm through. Shall we put it up? How did you say to fasten It?" Warren with his cigar in the side of his mouth came over and took up the mass of green netting. "Here take that end," drawing his own end over the head of the bed, while Helen straightened hers out at the foot. "Good! Now get some pins." They pinned it around the posts and over the railing and tucked it under the mattress, on one side, leaving the other side free to climb in. "There, that's not bad." Warren stood back and surveyed it compla
cently. "And I'll bet that'll do the
wcrk. eh?" "Oh, I hope so." said Helen. "If it'll only stay like that, but I'm afraid when we get in " "Well, we can get in carefully can't we?" They did get in most -carefully. Helen could not help but smile at War
ren's big, blue pajamed figure creeping under the net so stealthily. "Now turn the light out and come to bed," he demanded. "I want to get some sleep tonight." Helen slipped in as cautiously as she could, and in a few minutes Warren was asleep and breathing heavily. "Thunderation!" Helen was instantly awake. Warren was sitting up in bed savagely rubbing his arm. "Why why, dear what's the matter?" "Matter?" he growled. "Those infernal mosquitoes are in here as bad as ever." "Oh oh, the net must have slipped. Wait, dear I'll see." She slid out of bed and turned on the light. Warren was sitting up under the green netting, scratching the back of his neck as hp blinked at the sudFor a moment Helen turned away to hide a smile. Almost anyone looks rather foolish under a mosquito net, but Warren with his big nightrobed body, rumpled hair and angry, blinking eyes seemed like a surly lion aroused from its sleep by a disturbing flea. "Oh. yes, it has slipped here from over thes railing. We must have done that in getting in. Wait. I'll pin it back. Warren blinked at her sulkily. His attention was now divided between a
THE FUTURIST TWL
NERVOUS DYSPEPSIA, GAS OR INDIGESTION
By Donald BryanMany Jilted Lovers Join the Army
"Pape's Diapepsin" Settles Sour, Upset Stomachs in Five Minutes.
the finish of the eight counts is made with two regular turkey trot sways. It can readily be seen that this third movement has nothing complicated about it. Neither had the second ror that matter, although some practice is required to perfect the fish walk and to make it look like a graceful dance step. The skipr-ing in this tihrd movement, howt'Vcr, requires no practice at all, ami thf California Dip is done p re-
nature. We should dance like ehil-1 dren romp and play, with absolute 1 spontaneity. J A Suggestion. I I wonder If the people who are read-i ins this article are sitting still at this stage of the game, liko a lot of wood-1 en imases. trying to' puzzle out what ' seems to them a tangle of impossible dance sttps. If so, stop right hi?re
and listen to a little good advice from ; ou" who dances a great deal. ;
Start some good turkey trot on the t
s anv 6lu introduced ! niano or rdionograph, or whatever you ( the recruiting station, he said, to have
tar.go movements of to- have handy. Then get upon the noor a crestta'.Ien man. acting as it me
It may be a little lower than but the only practice required, earn to do it so perfectlv that it
rs eat-y and graceful rather than
!::cd. Then, too, it should !) ted right here, that the rroru the second to the third
how very soon the written description of the steps will fit in with the movement of your feet. Music has power for almost anything, you know. Then when you think you know the steps, practice them.
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I I iAVJ-kl i My movement has nothing complicated
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4j tJ0f9f t&?? i ?"k ! in anv of the
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.4. rH To Spite Unappreciative Maiden
Jilted heroes of the stage and novels are not the only men who join the army to spite the unappreciative young lass with the hope of making her n?gret her coldness, after it la too late, said Kecruiting OiTicer Abbott. It is a erv common occurrence in
ir.d try the steps. You havw no idea world has just given him a kick, come
in and ask to t-nlist. A few Questions generally cause the young man to tell the story. It is always the same, he said, the old story. The man believes he has the inside track, but just a he
is entering the home stretch, a dark horse enters the race. When he tries to clinch matters, the girl refuses, and he rushes off to the armv. telling her he can not live without her. The only difference, according to Corporal Abbott between the jilted lovers people read about and the kind that join the army is the way the affairs invariably end. He said instead of pining away as ehe should do. the girl goes ahead and marries the other fellow, allowing the first man to join the army, without rushiug into the recruiting station with tear stained eyes and making a scene.
fifty-six years ago. His ancestors were ;
Start soma good turkey trot on the piano or phonograph, or whatever you have handy. Then get up on the floor and try the steps. You have no idea how very soon the written description of the steps will fit in with the movement of your feet. Music has power for almost anything, you know. Then when you think you know the steps, practice them, each movement separately, and then fit the different movements together.
Hollanders, his grandfather a doctor
Father Was Poor. His father was so poor that the boy at eleven years was at work running i rrariHc fnr n linl.-r un,l inin ti
.......... . . ' . u . - . v . . . . ..'.-. (-1 O ' ' ; school at the same time. He started
STREET STORIES
There is a "real" man in Wayne county, in the words of County Agent Cobb. This is Cobb s stor. The busl-
at wei k iimi k. nt th iob until he est man 111 ayno couni. not oniy a
earned and all the time managed
j to keep up w ith his classes and well ahead, so that he got an appointment to West Point on merit in a competi- ! tive examination.
In scholarship at West Point Got
school teacher and farmer, but interested in btate political matter, investments and a number of other business, besides. He is i-ee J- lteynolds. former representative of the Sixth district. Mr.
thals stood second in a class of fifty-. " "ins "ow - 1 i i nil n rtk vy
two. Onlv two men were named to uu "
the corps of engineers from that class
Kverv morning he arises at 4 o'clock
! and Goethals was one of them. 1 nal 18 uuuer " -1 After years as an army engineer. , Sometime, he gets in cas 'Goethals was transferred to a station . be must make a business trip
under Colonel Merrill at Cincinnati. I n n" ne ""V"""
The most unfortunate thing fori"1 "ie oig ia.u.. ..
llUmOer OI nogs UU ur yrnuuiu;
feeds these every morning. Then he
thing
is that you are a
you," said Merrill,
lieutenant." "I am here to learn." answered Goethals, and he started out as rodman. From then on with Goethals it was drill. He rose rapidly, and built dikes.
dams, jetties and canals in the tropics j
during the Spanish war. all the time.
preparing for his master-work, the construction of the great waterway between the Atlantic and Pacific.
milks four or five of hia nine cows. There are a number of other matters which must be given attention every morning. He finishes these, and then
! takes milk to the creamery.
Then he must eat his breakfast and
WOMAN EVADES COUNTY OFFICERS
The Skipping Step
The California Dip.
BY DONALD BRIAN. Now playing in "The Marriage Market." Copyright, 1913, by International News Service.
The third movement of the Futurist Twirl begins with a skipping step. This comes after the Ssh walk move
ment, and is simply an ordinary skfp I leovemont should be made rapidly.
done four times in the regular turkey
trot position for dancing. On the fifth count comes what is known as the California Dip, with the man's right knee and the girl's right knee touching the floor. This dip is held for two counts of the music, and
There should really be no break at
all between the fish walk and the second movement, and the skipping and clip of the third. One leads directly into the other. After all, the secret of any dance step is to make it appear like second
each movement separately, and then fit the different movements together. Never try to do everything at once. The result will be a finished dance
rather than a series of movements,
and you will scoff at the idea of there ever being a time when you couldn't do so simple a thing as the Futurist
j Twirl.
Time it! Pape's Diapepsin will digest anything you eat and overcome a sour, gassy or out-of-order stomach 6urely within five minutes. If your meals don't fit comfortably, or what you eat lies like a lump of lead in your stomach, or if you have heartburn, that is a sign of indigestion. Get from your pharmacist a fiftycent case of Pape's Diapepsin and take a dose just as soon as you can. There wil be no sour risings, no belching of undigested food mixed with acid, no stomach gas or heartburn, fullness or heavy feeling in the stomach nausea, debilitating headaches, dizziness or intestinal griping. This will all go, and, besides, there will be no sour food left over in the stomach to poison your breath with nauseous odors. Pape's Diapepsin is a certain cure
for out-of-order stomachs, because it takes hold of your food and digests it just the same as if your stomach wasn't there. Relief in five minutes from all stomach misery is waiting for you at any drug store These large fifty-cent cases contain enough "Pape's Diapepsin" to keep the entire family free from stomach disorders and indigestion for many months. It belongs in your home.
place on his arm and the one on the back of his neck. "Oh, dear, I'll get you the camphor bottle." She brought him the camphor, and he applied it with all the seriousness of one treating a dangerous wound. Once more Helen turned out the light and crept into bed. But he was
hardly asleep before she was again
awakened. This time his language was moro vigorous than before. Again she slipped out and turned on the lights. Now the net was pulled up from the foot. It had also dropped down in the center, and as Warren sat up, glaring out angrily, it rested against his head and shoulders. "Sh don't dear. Wait just a minute I'll fix it. "Well, take it out of my face then. I don't want this infernal stuff aginst me." Helen drew it down tightly, raising the net from his face. "There! Now, listen, dear; you lie down and let me pin in all around you tight. And then I'll not get in that's what pulls it up. I'll lie over here on the couch." Warren made some faint protest about her having no net. "Oh, the mosquitoes won't bother me much. I'll sprinkle something ou the pillow. That'll help keep them away. And you know I'm not nearly so sensitive to them as you are." "But there's some in here now and we've got to get them out before you pin the net down." And here followed ten minutes in which Warren searched the covers and all iuside the net. But Helen was now too tired and
too sleepy to appreciate the absurd picture of Warren on his knees under that green netting, searching with the utmost gravity and some profanity, for an illusive mosquito or so. "George!" with a vigorous slap. I got that one." Then he lay down while Helen pinned the netting closely all around. "Raise it up don't let it drop down on my face." She drew it more tightly, and at last It was all securely pinned. Then once more she turned out the lights and lay down on the couch, sprifcklink some camphor about her. And Warren, now undisturbed by mosquitoes, slept soundly and noisily throughout the night.
Wagon Built Almost a Century Ago Relic to be Placed in Cabin at Glen
What probably is the oldest farm j ing something stronger hired Nathan
wagon in the county is reposing in a
shed south of the city. It is the property of Henry Roberts. 114 South Sixteenth street, and was built by Nathan Hawkins, of Webster, for Mr. Roberts' father, more than ninety years ago. The wheels were originally very high and equipped with narrow rims and tires, but they have been cut down and given broad steel tires. The spokes, hubs and axlos are just as good today as they were when first
Hawkins, his brother-in-law, who was
a carpenter, to build a wagon. Hawkins had never built a wagon, but he made the attempt. The first time it was used four horses were hitched to it to haul half a cord of green wood to the cabin home. That the wagon was able to stand up under this load was a revelation to the early scttlfr. who had never seen such a heavy load hauled without breaking a waeon. The waeon was passed on down to
not a rrivate enterprise for profit, but a Government project for the good of the world. He raised the
scale of wages paid, but forbade
strikes. The first worklngmen who
attempted to act in concert in de
manding an Increase were discharged immediately.
I-oremen were ordered to cease swearing at the men under them, and this rule was rigidly enforced. Officials who had carriages while others
had none were suddenly told to walk.
Colojl Goethals, who will go down in history as the builder of the canal and the one man without whom it is possible such abundant success could not have been obtained, was born in Brooklyn near the old Talmage church
prepare to go to school, being teacher of No. 1 school in Jefferson township. He cuts across his farm and makes a general Inspection, in this way. every morning. He arrives at school at 8 o'clock and goes through the day's work. In the evening he returns to his farm and
takes up the business of farmer. Five months of searching were re- i After a meeting at his school Thuraquired before service was obtained ' tla' niRht- lading UKtil a late hour he .J , , T,, . 1 announced that he would leave for on Ada Howard, whose husband Rich chicaKO Saturday morning early, buy Howard entered suit for divorce last j t-ome sheep for his farm and return at June. Mrs. Howard heard that her once. husband had complained in circuit j With only one hired hand, he is court and that her presence there wa3 more successful than many other farnecessary. She has evaded Sheriff 1 ri-?rs in the county ah he took a
Bayer and Deputy Mote until last ; course in Agriculture in the Georgia
night when the notice was served.
is said.
it
college. He follows farming along scientific plan.
fashioned out of Wayne comity white-; Henry Roberts, who cut clown the
oak almost a eenHiry ago. Mr. Roberts' grandfather. Thomas Roberts, when be came to Wayne county from North Carolina, brought with him an old wagon with wooden skeins. Jonathan Roberts, the son, used it for many years, and then want-
spokes and used it to haul logs. It is
now standing in a dry shed, and is i used to mount a portable gasoline en-j pine. Mr . Roberts intenrs to have itj placed in the iog cabin in Glen Miller t park as a relic of pioneer days in! 'W.i viip r-nnntv. I
Colonel George W. Goethals
Master Mind of Panama CanaV
Back of this plan of making the laborer more than a human machine ; was a master mind. It was not until Colonel George W.
Goethals was sent to the Isthmus to become chief engineer and chairman of the Isthmian Commission that the enterprise began to assume its real measure of success.
It was his idea to get an orgamza
EXPLAINS HOW . MONEY IS SPENT
lutes that he gave, but rather by the
work that he did. Then he took off
City Health Officer Davis takes exception to the statement of Dr. J. F. Thnrstnn in vi font 1 1 . 1 1 n Virt Pol
ladium to the effect that it costs the 1U m VVU,U ue juugeu u iuc-
city $9,668 last year to run its health
department Dr. Davis says this amount was listed under the expenses of this department, but that ?4.500 of the amount went to Reid Memorial hospital. $100 to the Home For Friendless Women, and $1,200 was appropriated to purchase a site for a pest house and has not been expended. With further decreases for miscellaneous expenditures the actual expenses of the health department for the last year were S3.S60.
according to Dr. Davis
his own uniform, and from that day j has never worn it on the work. j Next. Colonel Goethals made a rule ! thru every man at work in Panama ' should live in Panama. He then ' moved into a house on the brink of ;
. the Cuk-br.i cut. where he could look ! down on the construction trains, the ' ftoam shove's, the drill machines, the : i man fold enginery of that vast under- ' taking. I Asked to recognize the unions and '
tion, a tremendous force for work, in t sign contracts, Colonel Goethals perwhich each individual would be bent j cmptorily refused. He said the men on giving to the Government the very ) were not there to fight one another best that was in him. Recognition . but to fight the Calebra slides and of the laborer's right to be consider- j the Chagres river. Besides, it was ed a man was Goethals' master-stroke. mmmmmmmmmmmmmm i Goethals has accomplished more for M MM J
the elevation of the status of the la-1 borer than can easily be understood, j His achievement at Panama, doing more work in less time and better than was ever before done, has im- j pressed a lesson upon the labor con-) tractors, the superintendents and fore- j men all over the world. j Wanted Democracy. I In his first speech on arrival at the j wanted no salu Isthmus Colonel Goethals sr.id he ' wanted no saluting on the zone; that
seyercly lai a woman strength and tchen ivife or mother cowplains of fatigue, nervousness, loss of apbetite or energy, she needs rest, out-of-door exercise end building up. . The first thought should be Scott's Emulsion, which is medicinal food free from alcohol or narcotics. Its nourishing force quickly fills hollow cheeks, builds healthy tissue, enriche the blood, restores the healthy glow.
overcomes languor and makes tranqcil nerves. Nothing equals or compares with Scoff's Emahion for iut
tuch condilieBSr bat insist SCOTT'S. At mwvr drust -tor. MW.-'AaTWimjJJW!.W.!....fJ.j,.-M.i
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Bears ths Signature of
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ADLEY
Phone 2292
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