Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 38, Number 308, 4 November 1913 — Page 8

PAGE EIGHT

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, TUESDAY, NOV. 4, IV THE ONLY WAY That a Man and a Miss Can Properly Meet Without Being Introduced. By Nell Brinkley

IF CONSTIPATED OR BILIOUS "CMEIS" For Sick Headache, Sour Stomach. Sluggish Liver

Married Life the Second Year BY MABEL HERBERT URNER. Helen went into the writing room ind sat down before one of the desks. She took a sheet of hotel paper from the rack before her, and selected the least rusty of the pens. .Mechanically she write the date, August, It'll, on tht-dottel line under the imposing exaggerated picture of the hotel. Hut her hitter writing went no further. Instead sh drew aimless figures; on the hack or the blotter, while the l.rpt an anxious gaze on the lobby outside. By the big clock over the roomclerk's desk it was a quarter to eight. And Warren had not come nor had he telephoned nor sent her any message. In the two weeks they had been at the seashore, he had never before been later than seven. And now she had been waiting out on the veranda for him until everybody had gone into dinner. "Hasn't Mr. Curtiss come yet?" Mrs. Stevens had asked solicitously as she passed. "No, but I'm sure he'll be out on the next train," answered Helen trying to conceal her anxiety. Hut the next train had not brought him, and feeling so conspicuously on the deserted veranda she had sought refuge in the writing room.

Krom the dining room at tne end 01 the corridor came the mingled noises of a big restaurant the hurry of waiters, clatter of dishes, and the hum of many voices. Even had Helen not shrank from going to dinner alone, she knew that she could eat nothing. HELEN WORRIES. What could have happened? Had he been detained at the office surely he would have telephoned. There was, of course, always the possibility of a tieup in the sub-way but certainly not for so long. An accident? She tried resolutely to put that thought from her. And yet, as the minute hand of the big clock oyer the room clerk's desk moved on she could think of nothing else. "Oh, haven't you been to dinner?" asked Mrs. Stevens, as she and her husband came out of the dining room. "No, I thought I'd wait for Mr. Curtis." "He hasn't telephoned or sent you any word?" Helen shook her head. "And of course you don't know where to telephone?" "No, there would be no one at the office now, and I wouldn't know where else to 'phone." "Well, if he doesn't come soon," said Mr. Stevens, "and if I cane be of any service " "Oh. thank you," murmured Helen, "But I'm sure he'll be here in a fewmoments now." Although Mrs. Stevens urged her to come out with them on the veranda Helen now went upstairs. She wanted to escape their questions and sympathetic interest. It was not a very new or modernly appointed hotel, and there were no telephones in the rooms. So she left

wcrd at the office that should any message come she would be in her room. It. was a typical summer hotel room, scantily and cheaply furnished. Were

it not for their trunks and handbags it. would have seemed more barren

still. Helen walked aimlessly about, going first to one window and then to another. Every few minutes she would open the door to look down in the hall, but only to see an occasional bell boy with the inevitable pitcher of ice water, or perhaps a white-aproned maid with her dangling kevs. HELEN IS DISCONSOLATE. Once sh'- left her door open and walked the long length of the hall p.n.t the red light with its fire escape sign, to the window at the far end. It ovei looked the side of the house, but by leaning out she caught a

glimpt'.o of the beach and the ocean. How black thi water was! There was no moon and only the distant lighthouse flashed out now and then. Helen turned away with a shudder. That dark stretch of sea seemed only to accentuate her fears. What could have happened? For the hundredth time sh asked herself that. And what could she do? How much longer must she wait like this? Again she went down to the office. By the clock over the desk it was now twenty minutes after ten. "Has there been no message no telephone call?" The clerk shook his head. "Nothing as yet, Mrs. Curtis." Once more she went back to her room. What should she do? What could she do9 Feverishly she walked Tip and down from one window to the ether and out into th- hall again. A cofl co-stained. napkin-covering a tray before one of the doors reminded her that she had had no supper. But she knew she could not eat.

jT : WZ iS? nv ? 4k iky v V VCu '. . .p 1 Mi-Jy h'M A mihrT

v

and Bowels.

10-vent box. Take a Cascaret tonicht to cleans your I-iver. Stomach and Howell, and you will surely fel (treat by morning. You men and women wl-o have headache, coated torsut1, can't slvp, are bilious, nervous. ujset. tiotaercd with a sick, p.issy. disordered stomach, or have backache and fed all worn out Are you keeping your bowels clean with Ca? carets ore merely forcing a

passageway eery few days nith salts, cathartic pi'.ls or castor oil? Cascarets immodiatt ly ante and regulate the stomuch, remove th sour, undigested aud fermenting focnt and foul gases; take the excess bile from the liver and carry off the constipated waste matter and poison from th intestine and bowels. Remember, a Cascaret tonight will straighten you out by morninn. A lft-cent box from your druggist means

healthy bowel action; a clear head and cheerfulness for nioiuiis. Don't forget the children. Adv.

9764 A Dainty Set of Aprons and Work Hag.

The other day a young fellow knock-1 folks he doesn't know the fine-bred

ed the ashes from his pipe and soberly inspecting the toes of his new "hikerB," said woefully to me: "Isn't it a pity, Mam'selle, that there isn't SOME way for the decent, well-bred sort of fellows and girls to know the stranger whose personality reaches out to them across the curb or the subway aisle? Oh, of course, that wouldn't be a puzzle for one sort; 'getting acquainted' is the best thing they do! I don't mean them. I mean REAL people, the clean chap who goes about his business with his eyes cool and straight ahead when it comes to girl-

girl who favors the stranger she admires with the same unmeaning glance she gives the Metropolitan tower (unless he isn't looking!). That's the sort I mean. Dcn't you know, Mam'selle, that that yariety of chap, in his travels around the city streets sometimes holds the door open for a girl whom he would give his new bull-pup to know? Every detail about her appeals to the best he's got calls to him reaches out invisible hands and cries, 'what friends we'd be!' And he's got to accept her gracious, vanishing smile for his courtesv, straighten his back and FORGET IT! For, you see,

he can't know her if she was the kind he could why then why then" the woeful young fellow finished lamely, "why then she wouldn't bo the kind she is! Isn't it the same with girls? Don't a real girl look up in a crowded street into the eyes of a passing man and all of her capacity for comradeship or loving leap to him satisfied? And she goes on with her eyes cold and he goes on not knowing and they lose each other for all time! Gee there ought to bo u way out of that. I saw a girl in the gallery today she had grey eyes and she carried herself like a slim birch tree she liked the very pictures I did. I watched her! She

! Silk, satin, cloth, cretone or lawt may be used for the bag. while lawn

mull, linen or silk is suitable for th apron. The patterns are cut in one

went cut in front of rav very eves ' ried in a trunk, to the lucky house that ' size, medium. It requires sevenand dronned into New York out of holds her, and set down at her feet, j eights yard of twenty-seven inch ma-

sih. I'VI'i LOST Hl;l. . ... i.'l , Then on the ardor of your own tonthink of a way a way to get to the j gue depends your comradeship with

stranger girl one likes?

"Only one way," quoth I. "And this is" it. Don't you remember how the lover in Arabian tales fell in love with the passing princess doubled himself up in a carven trunk had himself carHfri on tlip norter's black back to her

house and the trunk banked down be-' town that's a.11 littered up with so fore her flung back the lid and stood : many people where she even lives? up with his hands on his heart and his ; I'd go in the trunk all right. But it's turban in lus hand? And watched the j a magic trunk 1 need one that would love dawn in her eyes? Billy boy J find its way by itself." that's the only way! Get yourself car-; But that is the only way!

her. You can t speak to her on tne street but you can pop up out of a trunk at her." Billy boy looked at me darkly and scornfully. "Magic! I knew It took that. How do I know In this blamed

Just last week the papers had been full of the unaccountable disappearance of a prominent man. He had left home in the morning and had not returned. And he would have had no possible cause or or motive. Kidnapped or sudden loss of memory were the only solutions. It was just ten minutes of eleven when a knock came at her door. She rushed ahead of the bell boy,

down the stairs to the office and into the telephone booth. Was it some one to say he was hurt or worse she could hardly hold the receiver. "Hello! Hello!" "Wait, there's your party," shrilled central. "Hello!" "Oh. I say, Helen I can't get out tonight. There's a big dinner on here at the club and they've rung me into it. I just left the table to phone you." "But why " the words came with an effort, "why didn't you 'phone before?" "I did try about 7 but couldn't get the hotel. Line busy. And hadn't the chance since. Not been worried have you?" "No, oh, no." "That's good. I'll sleep here at the club tonight, and be out early tomorrow afternoon. Will make the 5 train, if I can. Good-bye."

Scene From "Damaged Goods"

A Gentle and Effective Laxative. -l . . 1 1 . s ie a : i

She would wait until eleven hist. A mnci. genue anu euecuve ia.u

thirty minutes longer. And if by that j tiv im nn rnosr hnd rnmfr fhpn eh ! ferin

would go to the Stevens. She would

ask them what to do. Visions of search parties, of detectives of all that she had ever read of missing people, of strange disappearances, flashed through her mind.

GIRLS! GIRLS! TRY IT. BEAUTJFHOOR HAIR Make it Thick ,Glossy Wavy, Luxuriant and Remove all Dandruff.

what people demand when suffrom constipation. Thousands

swear by Dr. King's New Life Pills. Hugh Tallman, of San Antonio, Tex. writes: "They are, beoynd question, the best pills my wife and 1 have ever taken." They never cause pain. Price 25c. Recommended by A. G. Luken. (Advertisement)

HOKE SMITH'S

ELECTION OPPOSED

IK . a- .. I - f. p

1 3S

Your hair becomes light, wavy, fluffy, abundant and appears as soft, lustrous and beautiful as a young girl's after a "Danderine hair cleanse." Just try this moisten a cloth with a little Danderine and carefully draw it through your hair, taking one small strand at a time. This will cleanse the hair of dust, dirt and excessive oil and in just a few moments you have doubled the beauty of your hair. Besides beautifying the hair at once, Danderine dissolves every particle of dandruff; cleanses, purifies and invigorates the scalp, forever stopping itching and falling hair. But what will please you most will be after a few weeks' use when you will actually see new hajr Sne and downy at first yes; but really new

hair growing all over the scalp. If

you care for pretty, soft hair and lots of it surely get a 25 cent bottle of Knowlton's Danderine from any 3rugglst or toilet counter, and just try it. Adv.

y 1

"Damaged Goods" Will be presented at the Gennett theatre, Friday, Novembti , Matinee and Night.

Thoughts of Young America vv 4

To the Approaching Holiday Season

United State Senator Hoke Smith of Georgia, whose candidacy for reelection is being opposed by his old political rival, ex-Governor Joseph M. Brown,

Thoughts of every one turn toward

I the approaching holiday season. Christmas is first in the minds of the children, with its bright lights, its fe. -.stings, beautiful spirits and joyful spir

its, nut tne thoughts or their eiaers are in connection with tfc- preceding holiday, a day sn apart by the Pilgrim lathers for religious observance a day when people, dwelling in great cities and far away places shall kneel together in thankfulness for a land with peace and prosperity.

Although not having the religious significance of Christmas day. commemorating the birth of the Child in the manger, it has come to be regarded in a spirit equally reverent with that manifest during the Christmastide. Christmas Time of Feace. Christmas is a time of peace and1 good will to all men. but Thanksgiving is a day of solemnity and humbleness closely akin to both mirth , and joy. On this day the president of the United States and the humblest of its ! ninety millions of people knee-1 in j prayer upon the footstool of the Giver !

of all earthly possesions; the unfortunate! behind prison bars is made to

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lording it high over respectable fowls needed long before all the football of more plebian ancestry. j scores are posted on the evening of Fond mothers all over the land are I that holiday, looking loniringlv to the return of the ' And the young hopeful of the housecollege boy clad in glad raiment, I hold, who for the past lew months bringing home a sheaf of unpaid bills has found it to be almost impossible to father; the girls are awaiting the i to sustain life on only three meals per dances his return will herald, and the ; diem, counts the days that must elapse physician is lovingly fondling his case ' until father takes the carving knife of surgical instruments which will be in hand, and the feed is on.

terial for heart apron, two and onehalf yards for the Bretelle apron and one yard for bag of thirty-six inch material. A patetrn of thia illustration mailed to any address on receipt of ten cents in silver or stamps.

Name

Address

City

20TH CENTURY PHOTOGRAPHt At a Reduction, This Week "nly. This Coupon Good for 50c On any CabineL or Dozen Post Cards. Bring this Coupon. TWENTIETH CENTURY STUDIO, 919'2 Main Street

Look for the Sign

ALCOHOL 3 PER CENT cfiaila ti'i$ the FocdantlRctjuh. 1 iP.5 :!? Sionadis ariBcvcJs i

For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have

Always Bough!

Bean; the Signature

ProrRCK Di.'stioufhecrfti

ness tin;! iv.Coniaaisncitfcrr Opiiriij .Morphine nor Miacr al. ' Not Narcotic j

J".-ji,a Seta"

jl'xSnuia 1 JhcbuitUtx- I JtiheSttd I Jpvtmint - li. CiL-tMcitS'ja i hirm.M- 1

foil that after ail there is something lei": to bo thankful for; trie poor have a I'i etiirj glimn?e of better things; church bllo carry a message of gratitude to every city and hamlet, and men and women, whatever their es-.

tate. may contritely p.pprtciaie the answer to th oft-repeated prayer, "Give us this day cur daily bread." Already the self-conscious turkey, as if realizing that power is at best but a fleeting, temporal thing. is strutting around the arnyard and

Aperfrcl Hcnedv forCorisfipattoit , Sour Stci.iach.Diarriwfj arid Lo SS OFSleep.

NEW YORK

D

ft JP'

COLO AND SILVCRSMlfHS

DIAMONDS WATCHES

Jenkins & Company

In

Use For Over

Thirty Years

For Correct Glasses go to Miss C. M. Svvcilzer OPTOMETRIST 927U Main St. Phone

Esact Copy of Wrapper.

TV I ClKTauM CMT, nc 1

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A DOSE F

CKS'CAPUDINr. O N A LITTLEWATER CURES

HEADACHE COLDS AND GRIPP vLU AT WCLL'STOCKCD DRWQ STORCV

0TAT0ES! POTATOES!

Extra quality, 95c per bushel, three and five bushel lots. Come and see them. H. G. HABLEY 1035 Main Street. Phone 2292

LOANS 2 Per Cent Per Month

on household roods, pianos, teams, stock, etc., without removal. Loans made in all surrounding towns. Call, write or phone and our agent will call at your house.

Private

Retiable

The State Inveblment and Loan Company Room 40 Colonial Btdg. Phone 2560 Take elevator to Third Floor. Richmond, Indiana.