Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 39, Number 102, 10 March 1914 — Page 8
PAGE EIGHT
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, TUESDAY, MARCH 10, 1914
Married Life the Third Year
By MABEL HERBERT URNER. "Beginning to feel pretty shaky?" asked Warren, as a Btlll larger wave threw a spray almost to the edge of their steamer clothes. "A little," admitted Helen, "but didn't the purser say It would he smoother when we got to the Gulf stream?" '"Well, we are not there yet, and we may get It rough all the way. "But. dear, we didn't have anything like thiB coming over?" We took a more southerly course; besidesgoing east is always a better trip." He rose from his chair, stamped his feet to shake down his trousers and stood for a moment, his hands In his pockets. . "Don't feel like having any luncheon?" . Helen shook her head. "Oh, I couldnot eat anything." "All right, guess you are Just as well off without it." He took a couple of turns around the deck, and then went down to luncheon, while Helen lay there battling with waves of seasickness. It was the first time that she had felt the least ill. The trip over had been Ideally smooth. But their return voyage had begun rough, and now the third day out found them In an angry lurching sea. So far Helen had kept on deck although most of the other women had given up and taken refuge in their staterooms. When Warren came up from lunoheon, the waves were breaking still farther over the deck, sending the sprav almost into their faces. "We can't stay here; it is getting too wet." He called the deck steward and had their chairs moved to the other eid. where the deck was sheltered by a high canvas railing. HELEN GOES BELOW. Helen stood it for about an hour longer, then the roll of the ship grew more sickening, she finally had to give tip. "Dear, I am going to the stateroom. Perhaps if I loosen my clothes and lie down awhile I will feel better." Warren put down his book. "All right. Guess it is getting a bit rough for vou. Want me to bring this piljowr Ho helped her down to the stateroom. Helen had hoped he would come in, but he threw In the rug and pillow and left her with a brief "Try t- et x nap, yon will feel better by dinner." 'i l-h roou seemed close and the motion of the ship worse than on deck. There is nothing so depressing as seasickness, and as Helen lay there listening to the throbbing machinery and dashing waves, her eyes filled with tears of sheer despondency. But the swaying motion soon rocked her into an uneasy sleep. "How are you now?" Warren was
hanging up blj coat and steamer oap
Dessert
By Nell Brinkley
$100 Reward, $100 The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure in all Its stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure new known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being
a constitutional disease, requires 4 constitutional treatment- Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous f arfaces of the system, thereby debtroylog the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by building up the constitution and assisting nature in doing Its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers that they offer Ona Hundred Dollars for ay case that it falls to cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address F. J. CHENEY & CO.. Toledo, Ohio. Sold by all Druggists. Tic Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation.
QUIT MEAT IF YOUR KIDNEYS ACT BADLY
Take Tablespoonful of Salts if Back Hurts or Bladder BothersDrink Lots of Water.
Eros and he, yon know, is that hard-working young gentleman who has long ago discovered and drank from the "Well at the World's End" where bubbles the water of Eternal Youth ia a great fellow to hold forth
on the affairs of Men and Maids; he's written cook-books full of strange recipes. "What to eat on Tuesday; what to eat when the pay envelope ia fat and hungry-looking,"" just like the magazines now-a-day, don't you know?
And this Is his pet recipe for a great feast "Bread and cheese and KISSES." Kisses for dessert! Now Love that same Eros, alias Danny is my side partner; he sits on my couch on a wildcat skin every day of
the year and mixeB Into my work. I enough somehow my fancy goes like him; so I'm not cynical about him . a-wandering off and sails around and or anything he believes in! BUT around, and straight to pumpkin pie. although with all my heart and head ' Kisses for dessert make a pretty picI try to think with Love and all hl3 j ture but wouldn't you like it better Romances that caresses are dessert to have both? Me I do!
as your own way. Now," as he saw Helen on the verge of tears, "here's where II get out." He took some cigars from his grip,
He had turned on the light, and Hel- j thrust them into his vest pockets, and
en could see through the stateroom window that it was already dark. "Had a good nap?" She tried to rise, bttt a sudden lnroh sent her back against the pillow. "Pretty heavy sea," as he shoved back the steamer trunk that had slid from under the berth. "Guess we are going to have a night of it." "Oh, dear, is It getting worse?" "Well, it is not getting any better. How do you feel about dinner? Think you had better stay where you are?" "I am afraid I will have to, I am so dizzy." "All right, the steward will bring you what you want. There will not be many down tonight. See, here, we can't have this window open!" "Oh, Warren, don't shut that I" "Why not?" "Oh, it is so close in here. I can't stand it." "Well, this has got to he shut. Can't have the waves coming in here and getting everything soaked." THE WINDOW DISPUTE. "But they are not coming in now." "No, but they may at any moment. The wind is getting around to this side." "But I will watch it," pleadingly. ' 'Ifuh, the whole place would he flooded before you would know it." And Warren with his knee on the courh began closing the window. Oh, Warren .please don't. I will be deathly sick here without air."
slammed out of the stateroom
Sick and unstrung, she was now sobbing brokenly. The blood rushed to her head, increasing her diziness and the feeling of suffocation. Helen had always said she could do without anything except air. This had often been a point of contention between herself and Warren. Even in the coldest weather, she wanted the bedroom windows open wide at night. And sometimes, when he slammed them down, wrowling that it was too "infernally cold," she would sleep on the couoh in the sitting room. And now as she lay there, nervous, sick and dizzy, her imagination made the room more stifling than it really was. A flame of resentment and indignation was burning within her. She glanced at the closed porthole. Then she rang for the steward. "Will you open that port-hole?" when he came to the door. "You don't think the water will come in now, do you?" "Well, not just yet, ma'am," as he loosened the ventilator. The fresh air blew gratefully against her face, and she lay back drinking it in, fiercely resentful that Warren, knowing how much the air meant to her, had been willing to deprive her of it now. It was steadily growing rougher. But however uncomfortable and sick-
as a stateroom when three people are in it. Yet this was what Warren managed to do. He had lifted his suit case up on the couch, and, standing with his back towards them, was taking something out. Not once did he turn around or speak. The stewardess gathered up Helen's things and helped her out of the berth and into the corridor. At the. door Helen paused as though to speak, but Warren's hack was still toward her. "8-B" was only a few doors up the corridor. "Now, is that all, ma'am?" when the stewardess finally tucked Helen into the lower berth. "Is there anything I can get you?"
When she had gone Helen lay there ; alone in the darkened stateroom. She
NEW PARIS MAN BUYS BOND ISSUE
ra Dozler, MrB. Frank Teetor, Mrs. Charles Backenstoe, Mrs. Chester Lire and Mrs. Edith F. Smith. The hostess served a two-course luncheon,
UAiu.N, u., Marcn m wasnington j ther and JIra Dozier township school bonds in the sum of Mra .. Wn,k.r ha. r(t1,rn.(1
from an extended visit with her sister
eGorge Jones, at Dayton, Ohio.
$3,750 were purchased Saturday by S
V. JVKJlilw ui . ir w rails, iui a i ' ' ,
Tho hnnle hoar in.
mi urn of $138.25.
terest at the rate of 6 per cent. All except the last, which is for $750, are In denominations of $500. The last expires in 1921.
A WINTER COUGH A stubborn, annoying, depressing cough hangs on, racks the body, weakens the lungs, and often leads to ser-
t .I. ct . .1 ,
was beside an open porthole, but she j '"us ,"- "" "u "l had never been so unhappy. lyings New Discovery gives relief.
What would Warren do? If only he
lire a tfi ao tan a1 txt4 t Vi trn en iyi ntirtn off.
would relent and come to her. But . , ' ' . ,J,,. .. she dared not hope for that. She ff-11 P r V , had never done so defiant a thing, I Km& 8.New Discovery ought to be in
and she knew his rage was at a l"" ul
nr nil monir na rnr mip-ns rnma nr
WOMEN CAN
HARDLY BELIEVE
How Mys. Hurley Was Restored to Health by L?dia E. Pink ham Vegetable Compound. Eldon, Mo. "I was troubled with displacement. inF.arcfiir.iiuK and ferns')
?j weakness. Fcr ti a piiyears I could not
stand on my feet
long at a time and I could not walk two blocks without enduring: cutting1 and drawing pains down my right side which increased every month. I have been at that time purple in the f ace and would
walk the floor. I could not lie down or Bit still sometimes for a day and a night at a time. I was nervous, and had very little appetite, no ambition, melancholy, and often felt as though I had not a friend in the world. After I had tried most every female remedy without success, my mother-in-law advised me to take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. I did so and gained m strength every day. I have now no trouble In any way and highly praise your medicine. It advertises itself." Mr9. S. T. Hurley, Eldon, Missouri. Remember, the remedy which did this was Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. For sale everywhere. It has helped thousands of women who have been troubled with displacem ents, inflammation, ulceration, tumors, irregularities, periodic pains, backache, that bearing down feeling, indigestion, and nervous prostration, after all other means have failed. Why don't you try it? Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lya, Mass.
1 Hp
white heat. What form would his anger take in the morning? How would he punish her? Would it be by silence? would he ignore her the rest of the trip? Dizzy, seasick and utterly wretched.
licit ii xtxy liicx rj a&iu& oicxryiwaiy uut j into the black sea. Eight slow mourn- j I
ful bells, ana tnen irom the bridge came the werid night hourly cry of "All's well." It seemed like a mockery. She wondered bitterly if it would ever be "All's well" with her again.
lung trouble." Good for children's coughs. Money back if not satisfied. Price 50c and $1.00. Recommended by A. G. Luken & Co. Advertisement)
HAGERSTOWN
".Now, for heaven's sake, don't get j enin me motion or tne snip, it usono of vour unreasonable fits. I told ually makes one sleepy, and Helen you the" wind was shifting to this side j dozed off again. It was almost 10 and the window has to be closed. It ' o'clock before Warren came back, isn't the air you want half as much ! "What is that window doing open?" j he demanded angrily. !am?Mr!mTf!!!!!!B!!!!?!!! For a moment, Helen, awakened so
i suddenly, was dazed. Then she anj swered quietly. ; "I coul5't stand it. Warren, it was
too clofi- ;r hero. I had the steward
1 (ir.on t
i "Well, you will have to stand it!" 1 rsi n &nee mor closed it. "We are ', not goIn- to have everything ruined ; jiist because you want your own way." Afid scowling darkly, he cleared off
swine thiiigs from the upper berth where hes lept. For several moments Helen lay quite still, then she raised herself on the pillow. "Warren, if you are going to keep that ventilator losed all night, I will have to ask the stewardess If I cant
t sleep in another stateroom."
This was so unexpected and so unlike Helen that for a moment Warren was disconcerted. Then he snarled. "You try anything like that, and
you will be good and sorry."
The bell was on the wall where
Helen could reach it from where she
lay. Without a word she leaned over
and rang it. Warren, who did not for a moment believe she would do such a thing, fairly glared at her.
"Stewardess," when the woman came to the door, "do you know if there are any vacant staterooms on
this corridor?"
"Yes, ma'am; there is nobody in 8 B." "Wrell, will you ask the purser If I can sleep there tonight? Mr. Curtis doesn't wish this window open, and I must have more air. If there is any extra charge, I will gladly pay it." It was a most unusual request. The stewardess glanced quickly at Warren's scowling face, and then at Helen's white, tremulous one. A LONE STATEROOM. "I will ask about it, ma'am. I will let you know in just a moment." She hurried out, and Helen shielded her eyes with her arm. She did not. wlBh to see Warren's face. Except for the noise of the ship and the waves, there was tense silence. Not a word was spoken. In a very few moments the stewardess came again to the door. "It is all right, ma'am. Shall I help you in there now?" Helen nodded and reached for her dressing case and bathrobe. It is hard to maintain an aloof and dignified attitude In a plaee so small
For the Stomach and Liver. I. N. Stuart, West Webster, N. Y., writes: "I have used Chamberlain's Tablets for disorders of the stomach and liver off and on for the past five years, and it affords me pleasure to state that I have found them to be just as represented. They are mild in their action and the results have been satisfactory. I value them highly." For sale by all druggists. ( Advertisement j
I i
, ..Mrs. Charity Quickie was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Kirby, Friday. Mrs. Charles Werking and Mrs. E. S. Wycoff will entertain Thursday afternoon at cards and luncheon. Mrs. Mary Miller, of New Madison, Ohio, is visiting with Mr. and Mrs. Orpha Jones and family. Mrs. Alvin Peele was hostess to the Priscilla club Thursday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Will Abbott and son Bruce were guests over Sunday at Richmond. The Social circle was delightfully entertained Friday afternoon at the home of Mrs. W. H. Porter. The guests outside the circle members wee Mrs. Margaret Lontz, Mrs. Lau-
Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Jones are visiting with Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Morris, at Indianapolis.
The law placing a prohibitive tax on the manufacture and sale in the United States of matches containing white phosphorus becomes effective July 1.
Always Reliable Relief f rem the ailments caused by disordered stomach, torpid liver, irregular bowels is given quickly, safely, and assuredly by the tried and reliable BEECHMZ'S PILLS SoM (Twrwhar. In box, lOc. 25c
We are a nation of meat eaters and our blood is filled with uric acid, says a well-known authority, who warns us to be constantly on guard against kidney trouble. The kidneys do their utmost to free the blood of this irritating acid, but become weak from the overwork; they get sluggish; the eliminative tissues clog and thus the waste is retained in the blood to poison the entire system. When your kidneys ache and feel like lumps of lead, and you hare stinging pains in the back or the urine is cloudy, full of sediment, or the bladder is Irritable, obliging you to seek relief during the night; when you have severe headaches, nervous and dizzy spells, sleeplessness, acid stom
ach or rheumatism in bad weather, get from your pharmacist about fir ounces of Jad Salts; take a tablespoonful in a glass of watt-r ben.ie breakfast each morning and in a few days your kidneys will act fine. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia. and has been used for
i generations to flush and stimulate 'clogged kidneys, to neutralize the acids in urine so it is no longer a .source of irritation, thus ending tinlary and bladder disorders. Jad Salts is inexpensive and cannot injure; makes a delightful effervescent lithia-water drink, and nobody can make a mistake by taking a little occasionally to keep the kidneys clean
and active.
Try It While Coffee Is So Dear The Best is an Economy 300 Cups to the Pound ONE TEASPOONFUL MAKES TWO CUPS Published by the Growers of India Tea
GARDEN SEED Rices tested. Buy it in the bulk. A good seed and will bring results. Geo. Brehm Co. 517 Main St., Phone 1747
3
LaoDS At Legal Rate 2 Per Cent Per Month on Household Goods, Pianos, Livestock, Etc., from $10 to $250. Home Loan Co. 220 Colonial Bldg. Phone 1509, Richmond, Indiana.
TRY COOPER'S BLEND COFFEE For Sal. at Cooper's Grocery
COOTHMUE
9 o
Our Fiss IP aim Its Salle HJotil Marclhi JLSttIhi, WE WILL GIVE WITH EVERY SUIT OR OVERCOAT SOLD AT OUR RICHMOND STORE AN EXTRA PAIR OF PANTS,
Pair $5.00 Pants or Fancy Vest FREE
55
I Aft ft rarnYiTlra
' M
rfl con i i ?i n ? rwwi5
II I k1! IWM 1 1 I I II I II I I 1 i
9
i 11(325? Q "05083356 $0&J gEDSE)
Coat and Two Pairs ol Pants
Don't miss this opportunity to get strictly up-to-date Union Tailored Clothes at a saving of $10 to $15 on everyorder. Union Label in every Garment.
Made to Measure. 1024 IVIAIIV STREET.
HQ
Made to Fit.
MO
RICHMOND, IND.
