Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 39, Number 61, 21 January 1914 — Page 8
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. WEDNESDAY, JAN. 21, 1914 SECOND QUARTERLY MEETINGJTCHURCH Methodists of Milton Gather ai Church for Communion. The Gold Witch By Stella Fibres
PAGE EIGHT
MN..TO.W Ind.. Jan. 21. The second ouartrrly rriert;v.s of this conference rar vr3 Iirlrt nt the M. E. church, Sunday. Owing to other appointments, the rfitrict Fitperintendent. Dr. Tevis, of RuKhvi'il,'. oouhl not. be here and the Rev. Mr. Wer.thafor. pastor, delivered the frrmcn, takiug as hir. theme Paul's words. "T Am Crr'.eifed with Christ", and after he excellent sertuou presided eve- tbe Lortf'a Snnjser. In the af'err.oor. P.ev. Mr. Wejthafer with overal fvrthe iepifcvr: visited the home of Mrs. It. IV Nwiran and Mrs. John T?i.):P. who r.r- unable to attend church. rti:d servj? ihr- communion. Mr. nsd Mrr. F. P. .'ones entertainer! for Mr. an-.' Mrs. Fred Hurst, of Oarkston, M'ssr-r.ri, at dinner Sunday Mr. nrd Mrs. T-Israco I,. Hurst, Mr. WaUcr r!r;--t. Mr. and Mrs. Charles
dresh. Mi. m. . Miss Mmy Oris Kc ih'- cuf .v . lam fr Yilg:! 11
tut foVvtK verv M tihI M-s. riyO.
:ort:;r Harpt. Mrs. Alice Nellie .To ".'s. Mr. ard Mrs. s. Mr. 'rrf:i'ji XJwst and .: :i' .Trrf s rotn Earlham. ;r,. t ? Indianapolis, was :; Mr. ; n J .v,r. John Kelv'ly, ever Sunday, fr.nau, vh war sick and
is aain at his voak. M'Uer, of east
a. had a: ro:r,patiy Sunday, Mes-,'-'('.skfc ?T,r, soii Rvwrell, and
."file and Miss
or '.: ii2 tv.
tocrtro K.-cver of l.nf.cr.tvfH
': Kv er, of MSton. Mr. nml Mts. Kdwnrd Beeson and Mi. in.i Mrs. Albert Newman were at Ciie-ihrif'y.e City Saturday evening. Mips ?rcae C.Crook entertained at a iiV; j.ubing Sisturdiy evening in. honnr her birthday. Her guests were 'he MKsrs Augi'i. ta Miller, Ruth McCorniick, M?ry .--ills, Mensrs. Walter Highain, Albert Ferris, Ralph Moore and Paul fJarrett. The young people enjoyed a big taffy pull after which they pp:-,t the time in Karnes and were erv?d ico cream and cake. Mr. ami Mrs. Crook, Mr. and Mrs. Edwsrd Wilson, Albert Wilson and Miss Be? le eG-.iae were at Richmond, Sund-y to attend the Honeywell meetings!?. Mrs. W. P. Moore entertained the Home club Friday evening. Messrs. and Mesd&mes O. H. Beeson ard U. M. Jones attended the Honeywell meetings at Richmond Sunday evening. Mrs. Frank Callaway and aunt, Mrs. Barton, had as their guests Sunday, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Marson and Miss Catherine Callaway, of Cambridge City. Mr. and Mrs. Marion Ieverton entertained Mrs. Thomas Ball of eLwisville, Sunday. The meetings at the Friends church
were largely attended Sunday and j
much spiritual interest, was mainfest. There were a number from Cambridge citv and Kast eGrmantown in attend-
i i . , , t iftj I Helen was quite a little heathen. She Harry Doty gave a solo, He Lifted i ,. :
Me" at the Honeywell meeting at
The Gold Witch finds an oldharp an instrument she loves. In the dimming twilight Torn and liis father steal in to listen. As the exquisite notes throb out, shadowy pictures form in the dusk. To Tom they are vis
ions of a happy future; to his father bitter-sweet memories of the past of his ward's mother, whom he loved but did not nuirry.
been a very happy one. It was Sunday, and Warren had been with her all day, and he had been unusually companionable. In the morning ho had rad the papers, while she sat happily with her mending basket. In some ways
Richmond, Sunday. Mrs. David Nugent is sick with Lagrippe. O. H. Beeson was at Columbus, Ohio Monday to attend the annual meeting of the Stock Yards company. Miss Ruby Moore, of Richmond, was heme to sepnd Sunday with her par- - Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Moore and family. i:. J. A. Brown and son were the w( ?k end quests of her sister, Mrs. L. M. eOntle, at Richmond. Mr. and Mrs. James Doddridge has as company at dinner Sunday, Mr. and Mrs. Will Hunt, of Cambridge City, Mr. and Mr?. Earl Doddridge and Mr. and Mrs. Irvin Warren, of Union county. Mr. ard Mrs. Will Wallace, of south of town, called on Mr. and Mrs. Elwood Beson Sunday. Mr. Beeson is rencr'ed as not so well. Jun j Temnlin is sick and unable to attend school.
could never see why it was worse to sew or mend on Sunday than to do anything else. And she was never happier than when on Sunday morning Warren would read to her while she sat sewing in a low chair beside him.
! In the afternoon tlioy had gone for a long walk, and came homo just in time , to dress and got over to the Stevens, , with whom they had promised to dine. I Helen's mood seemed infectious, i Mr. Stevens told some very clever stories. And ever. Wan on, who rarely told ! stories, but when he did. told them j with inimitable humor, now related i some incidents of his Western trip. I TELLS OF HER KITTEN.
j Then Helen found herself tilling of ' evenings they spent with the St':Pufisy Purrmow's antics. How she al- venses sire would listen quietly ro ways nosed her way into every box, ! Warren and Mr. Stevens bur tonight
' and h. v she bad squirm. '-d into lie- they were listening to her
; lia's byx on the top of her new Faster ' But
bonnet without knocking off the lid. : her animation she felt Warren's foot
and how frightened and angry Delia J touch hers under the table. She glanchad been when she found her there. ' ed at him quickly to find him frowning The siorv itseif was very trivial, but disapprovingly.
she had bought since Warren's return, was looking away from her now? Plain brought all the fairness and delicate ly he did not wish to exchange glances
coloring of her skin. And she knew that several times that evening there had been a look of admiration in Warn r's eyes as they rested upon her, thr.t had not been there for many months. "Shall we have coffee in the other room?" asked Mrs - Stevens. Oh, no. let's have it here." answered her husband. "There's something companionable about sitting around a table that you can't get anywhere else? And they lingered long over their : coffee, laughing and talking with the sense of well-being that a good dinner and good company some times brings. Never had Helen been so animated. : Ne er had she "let herself go. She ! wii? vaguely conscious, too. that she 1 was talking well. Never had word and ! funic c fliiLinth' Toiifill- i r, tli..
fcr fear the Stevenses might notice But again she felt the warning nudge
uiutt I i ne tame. ; "For the rest of the evening she was
as silent as she was talkative net ore, and riie was unutterably wretched. Oil, why had she so let herself it seemed to her that she had talked much more than she reaily had. Her inii' at ions too. seemed now very foolish and undignified. Oh. how she could have let p. little applause had her on to make such a spectacle of herself? Ai'd so in her mind she exaggerated everything and tortured h.-rscif with the suggestions, as ouiy a sensitive, imaginative wom- : an can. i The rest of the evening seamed in- ; terminable. Sh was feverishly ;nx- ' ions to get av.-i.v. When at h't she i felt she could hardly wait until they reached the street before she asked i qui veringly. "Warren, what WAS it? What 1)11)
of the family is about to be married j peacefully. This Is only one of th to James Clunev, when a valuable many interesting events which creates
uddenly at the very height of1' do.
"What
lid von do?" blankly.
Married Life the Third Year BY f .1 ABEL HERBERT URNER
she told it that, gave
it was the way
it a eharm. "I say, Helen, give up that 'miration of the woman at the suffragette meeting." demanded Warren. "Oh. no. no." flushing. "I couldn't do that." "Why "Why not. of course you can." Then turning to Mrs. Stevens.
Helen was never a brilliant conver- "sne went to a sunia-e uiet-uim u.
at'ona-ist. No one could ever accuse omer nay turn c.me- i-... n. km.iv i.
her of trving to scintilate. As a rule one of the speakers, .love n was out when f,i:c- was in company, especially I of sight! Give it to us, Kitten! Lets v. . -. Warren was present, she was '. have it. mer or less self-conscious and much j At any other time Helen could not preferred to listen than to ta'.k. have, been persuaded to do this before But tonicht she was unusuallv ani-' any one but Warren, but now she mated. Wc; all have occasional mo- i yielded to their insistence. She ev.-n merits of exhileratton, when we chat- i stood up ro better give the effect. If t,r away with unconscious vivacity, j she had done well before, she surpasswhen we "let ourselves go" and of- ed herself now. She gave as much of ton r-rrot it itirwrH And for Hoi. i the speech as she could remember,
HELEN IS WARNED. It was as sudden and as subduing as a dash of cold water. All her exhiliration instinctively faded into an anguished self-consciousness. What had she said? What did she do? She looked at him in mu'e inquiry. He was still frowning, but he
"Oh. 1 ki'ow- 1 know i talker too much! I know I was excited all evening -but what did I say or do just then that made you stop me." "Stop you?" still blankly. "Why, yes when you frowned and nudged me at the table?" "What are you talking about anyway0" "Oh. Warren, don't! Couldn't you see I was anguished over it all.
Gennett. The coming of the new and massive
and spectacular scenic production of
"The Winning of Barbara Worth to i the Gt nneit tomorrow night may be i classed as one of the big events of the , present season, not only because of the n- im'icenoe of the scenic equipment ;ind the distinction of the presenting company, but because of the f,u ; that it is a dramatization of one of the most celebrated novels of the lai five years. Harold Bell Wright found his ideal woman, Barbara Worth, lying in j 1'alma de la Mamo de Disc "The Hol- ' low of the Hand of God." Child of j the desert, he found her babe, wailing ion a sand dunne, while her mo'.ner I was hunting in vain for water. The ! author, carrying the tragedy of her i infant hood through the first pages of ' his book, pictures the child growing
into girlhood, imbued with a sense of teh vastness of intiinity, of its patience, its strength, it cruelty, and its capacity to pity.
a typhoon or lun in tne new iarre, "Stop Thief." which Cohan and Harris will present ar the Gennett Saturday matinee and night.
ring, the gift of her father, disappears. And this is only one of the many mysterious robberies which have taken place in the Carr household. The po
lice are called in to solve the mystery "The Parish Priest."
and capture the culprit. They find a Two large audiences greeted the most puzzling task on their hands. Francis Sayles players yesterday at -
Pnsently the ring is found and re- i me .Murray, ami enjojea me perioralturned to Madge under circumstances j JshiMes which is which lead to the suspicion that the j one of the b(,st yet offered by this prospective son-in-law, Cluney, has j company, and each member is seen been the thief. Then the absent- to good advantage. This will be the minded William Carr, Madge's father, j offering for the remainder of the week is discovered misplacing several arti-l with matinees Thursday and aSturday. cles in a most questionable manner. ! Friday night there will be a big amaand then at last the truth of the mat- teur contest after the performance, tor comes out. The ring was stolen i by Nell, a professional thief, w ho had j SSSS
obtained entrance to the ( arr hornet disguised as a serving maid. Most of.j the other valuables prove'd to havej been abstracted by Jack Doogan. the; accomplice and fiance of Nell, and the)
remaining articles, which have so mysteriously vanished are returned mislaid by father Carr, who. by the way.
all "stopped" the wedding proceeds! 1isa,llu-eui
CASTOR I A For Infants and Children. The Kind You Hais Always Bought
Bears the
"Stop Thief." There is chaos in the Carr household, for Madge, the oldest daughter
'a thi'- was such a moment. Pel ba ns it was because the day had
MOTHER! THE CHILD IS COSTIVE, BILIOUS If Tongue is Coated, Breath Bad, Stomach Sour, Don't Hesitate!
Cive "California Syrup of Figs" at once a teaspoonful today often saves a sick child tomorrow. If your little one is out-of-sorts, halfsick, isn't resting, eating and acting naturally look, Mother! see if tongue is coated. This is a sure sign that it's little stomach, liver and bowels are clogged with waste. When cross, irritable, feverish, stomach sour, breath tad or has stomach-ache, diarrhoea, sore throat, full of cold, give a teaspoonful of "California Syrup of FlgB," and in a few hours all the constipated poison, undigested food and sour bile gently moves out of its little bowels without griping, and you have a well, playful child again. Mothers can rest easy after giving this harmless "fruit laxative," because it never fails to cleanse the little ones's liver and bowels and sweeten the stomach and they dearly love its pleasant taste. Full directions for babies, children of all ages and for grown-ups printed on each bottle. Beware of counterfeit fig syrups. Ask your- druggist for a 50-cent bottle of "California Syrup of Figs:" then see that it is made by the "California Fig Syrup Company." Don't be fooled! Adv.
and then made up a great deal more. All in the same shrill ranting tone of the suffragette who was making her first speech in public, and who felt that it was only necessary to make many vigirous gestures and use many high sounding phrases about "woman's rights" and "woman's independence," and "down-trodden womankind." Helen had a natural talent, for mimicry. She could come home from the theatre and imitate the actors with an irresistible drollery all .her own. And now while they were still convulsed with laughter at the suffragette impersonation, Warren insisted that she take off the star of a play they had just seen. It hapened that Mr. and Mrs. Stevens had also seen the play, and they all shouted at the clever mimicry. Flushed with excitement and urged only by roars of laughter, Helen gave one imitation after another until she finally sang breathless into her chair. Bravo, Kitten, Bravo, exclaimed Warren. "We'll have you in vaudeville yet." "Why, dear, you're wonderful," and Mrs. Stevens leaned forvard in genuine admiration. "Why didn't you let any of us know you could do this?" "That's what I want to know?" demanded Mr. Stevens. "Think of what we've been missing. "Oh, its's a diffident little Kitten, and it doesn't often show off in public," laughed Warren. But in spite of the lightness of his tone there was an unmistakeable note of pride in his Voice that set Helen's heart a fluttering. She was intoxicated with it all, with the sense of her own success and with the praise and admiration they had showered upon her, and above all with
the realization that W arren was !
proud of her. She was conscious, too, that she was looking unusually well. Every now and then she caught her reflection in the mirror of the sideboard opposite. The dainty pale blue chiffon gown, that
Feel
0it
IT
Sods ?
If s a good idea to look for the cause! One common, but often unsuspected cause is coffee-drinking. Yet some persons seem able to get along with coffee at least for a time. But when headachy, bilious days come; breakfast or smie other meal doesn't taste good; and the day's work goes wrong. (Ever feel that way?) then it's time to find out for sure if coffee is causing the trouble in your case. There's a subtle, poisonous drug, "caffine," in coffee that interferes with the normal functions of body, brain and nerves, and has a lot to do with one's comfort and progress. Suppose for a test you try the simple expedient of quitting coffee and using well-made
ENNETT T!S!S Thursday, JAM.
The SEASON'S BIGGEST EVENT THE ORIGINAL Studcbakcr Thoatre, Chicago, Production
a pure food-drink made of choice wheat. It has a delightful, Java-like flavour but is absolutely free from caffeine or any other drug. After ten days or two weeks you will be able to decide whether to go back to coffee troubles, or stick to Postum and peace and comfort. Postum eomes in two forms. Regular Postum must be well boiled. Instant Postum doesn't require boiling, but is prepared instantly by stirring a level teaspoonful in an ordinary cup of hot water and adding cream and sugar to taste. Grocers everywhere sell both kinds. "There's a Reason" for POSTUM
N t j U ii u t i u U
A PLAY Y MAXK SWAN From the Book that Thrilled the World BY HAROLD E ELL W2.CHT
II
THE ONE PARTICULAR CO 3l PLAY THAT MORE THAN PLtIAJiI3 Tt.Ll READER OF THE STORY
Prices 25c, 50c, 75c, 1 .0 3, $1.50 Scat Sale Tuesday Klzil Crdizrc Row
Skating Tuesday and Thurday Evenings. Saturdays : Morning, Afternoon and Evening.
as
